Source: The Cavalier Daily (University of Virginia) Copyright: 1999 The Cavalier Daily, Inc. Pubdate: Thu, 25 Feb 1999 Section: Cavalier Daily University Forum Contact: (804) 924-7290 Mail: Basement, Newcomb Hall; Charlottesville, VA 22904 Website: http://www.cavalierdaily.com/ Author: Adam J. Smith Note: Adam Smith is the Associate Director for the Drug Reform Coordination Network Also: Information on DRCNet's HEA reform campaign is at http://www.u-net.org/ DISCRIMINATION PLAGUES ACT ON OCT. 7, President Clinton signed into law the Higher Education Act of 1998, which includes a provision that will deny or delay federal financial aid to any student with a drug conviction, no matter how minor. In response, students across the country are participating in a growing campaign to have the provision overturned. They have good reason to get involved. Whatever Congress' intent, the law's impact will be discriminatory on several levels. First, the law represents an additional penalty, over and above court-imposed sanctions, levied upon lower and middle class students. Wealthier students, the children of legislators for instance, will be virtually unaffected. While the law allows for provisional reinstatement of eligibility if a student undergoes drug treatment and random drug testing, such treatment is largely unavailable to those without significant resources. The federal government's own 1997 study indicates that 48 percent of America's drug treatment needs are currently unmet. In fact, only 7 percent of the federal drug war budget is earmarked for treatment, while the overwhelming majority goes to enforcement and military interdiction. Finally, for most young offenders, getting caught with a small amount of marijuana no more indicates a medical need for substance abuse treatment than a college sophomore's underage drinking citation indicates alcoholism. Next, the law singles out young drug offenders--the overwhelming majority of whom are convicted of non-violent possession--as singularly unworthy of federal financial aid. Convictions for sexual assault, stalking or perjury, for example, carry no such penalties. Most disturbingly, this law will discriminate based on race. The reality of the drug war in America is that it is prosecuted most vigorously in poor and non-white neighborhoods. According to a 1995 report from the Sentencing Project, blacks, who are 12 percent of the population, and who make up approximately 13 percent of all drug users, comprise 55 percent of those convicted of drug offenses. The Sentencing Project's report also indicates that today in America, fully one in three black males in the 18-29 age group is under the "supervision" of the criminal justice system. Overall, 75 percent of those entering the corrections system are either black or Latino. Are the drugs gone yet? Why should we believe that making it more difficult for those who've already been punished to enter the mainstream through education will have a positive impact? The drug war is decades old, costs taxpayers tens of billions of dollars per year and has given America the highest per-capita incarceration rate on the planet. In states such as California, Maryland, New York and others, more money is now being spent on prisons than on higher education. Imprisoning a young person, by the way, costs taxpayers far more than does a Pell Grant or a Stafford loan--and once educated, these students will be contributors to society, on the tax rolls and productive. Escalation of the drug war has long been justified as necessary to "protect children" from drug use. But it would be difficult to find a single college student who could not have bought illicit drugs while in high school. The University of Michigan's "Monitoring the Future" survey indicates that 90 percent of high school seniors say that illicit drugs are "easy" or "fairly easy" to obtain. Today's college students were the same children the escalation of the war was designed to protect. But have we "protected" a single young person from access to drugs? Can we point to a single "drug free" high school? If not, when exactly will it be time to reevaluate the punitive focus of our policies? The newest weapon in Washington's drug war places obstacles in the path of young people who are trying to get their lives together through education. Surveys show that more than 50 percent of high school seniors have used an illicit substance. Are half of our young people unworthy of financial aid? Or just the poor, the non-white and the unlucky? Assuming that this law does not make kids "drug free," what's next? Underage drinking is illegal, and inarguably a more widespread and pressing campus problem than illicit drug use. Will Washington decide to withhold financial aid for illicit alcohol use? It is time for college students to speak up. Today's college students have become the pawns of politicians who are as adamant about "zero tolerance" as they are out of touch with the realities of young people. Impeding education is not a rational policy by any measure. The Higher Education Act of 1998 gives students the opportunity, even the responsibility, to join the debate. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake