HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Student Financial Aid's Anti-Drug Provision Fizzles
Pubdate: Mon, 30 Sep 2002
Source: Daily Iowan, The (IA Edu)
Copyright: 2002 The Daily Iowan
Contact:  http://www.dailyiowan.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/937
Author: John Molseed

STUDENT FINANCIAL AID'S ANTI-DRUG PROVISION FIZZLES

A federal financial-aid provision aimed at denying government money to 
students with drug convictions hasn't proven to be much of a hurdle at the UI.

This fall, 10 UI financial-aid applicants were initially turned down for 
assistance under the Higher Education Act measure that denies or limits 
federal aid for students who have been convicted of drug- related crimes. 
All the applicants either admitted to a drug conviction or left the 
question blank on their Free Application for Federal Student Aid forms. 
They later changed their answers when notified by the university.

"It's a self-reported field," said Catherine Wilcox, the UI associate 
director of Financial Aid, adding that the law does not provide any way of 
verifying an applicant's answer.

The question appears on the financial-aid as a "yes" or "no" field. 
Applications with a blank or "yes" answer are flagged. They are then 
contacted by letter explaining that they may not receive aid and are given 
the opportunity to change the response. There is no method to determine if 
the corrected response was deliberately falsified to retain eligibility.

Approximately 87,000 students nationwide have been denied federal aid since 
the provision's implementation in 1998, said Shawn Heller, the national 
director of Students for a Sensible Drug Policy. An estimated 30,000 were 
denied loans and grants at the start of this year. Not all of the 
applicants were necessarily enrolled when their aid applications were rejected.

"Many people in higher education and financial aid strongly oppose even 
having the question," Wilcox said. "If there's no way of policing it, what 
purpose does it serve?"

The UI's first chapter of Students for a Sensible Drug Policy group will 
meet tonight to begin a campaign to repeal the provision and raise 
awareness on campus about drug laws.

"Most students don't even know about the Higher Education Act provision," 
said freshman Kyle FitzGerald, a co-founding member.

The group is a Washington, D.C.-based organization formed in 1998 to repeal 
the provision. A resolution in the House of Representatives calls for the 
provision's removal and has 69 supporters, but lawmakers say it probably 
won't be addressed before the end of the current congressional session.

"These kind of changes to the Higher Education Act usually come when the 
entire act is reauthorized," said Bill Tate, a spokesman for Rep. Jim 
Leach, R-Iowa. "We'd want to see it in the context of the entire act."

The measure is slated for reauthorization next year.

Matt Blizek, the UI Student Government vice president, said he hopes the 
Iowa City group gets more students and young people involved in politics.

"Students will care about [the drug provision]," he said. "They're being 
persecuted for personal choices. This is an issue where the politicians are 
way behind the public."

UI junior George Pappas, another co-founder of the local group, said the 
organization will also address such local and university issues as the 
one-strike dorm policy, which expels students from campus housing if 
they're caught with any amount of drugs.

Students for a Sensible Drug Policy will meet today at 7 p.m. at Pizza on 
Dubuque, 5 S. Dubuque St.

UI senior Andrew Williams is working to start another student group with a 
similar agenda.

Williams is drafting a constitution for a local chapter of National 
Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, which he will present to the 
UISG sometime this week. Like the other group, he hopes his can work 
closely with local politicians to help create alternatives to the nation's 
drug war. He also advocates the legalization of marijuana.

"I want to break down the stereotypes of recreational cannabis users," 
Williams said. "People can use it and lead a productive life."
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