Pot times July 18, 2005
Drug Busts Hit Students Hard
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n1136/a08.htmlNewshawk: Stop the War on Youth -www.DAREgeneration.com
Pubdate: Mon, 18 Jul 2005 DRUG BUSTS HIT STUDENTS HARD
Source: Capital Times, The (WI)
Copyright: 2005 The Capital Times
Contact:
tctvoice@madison.com
Website: http://www.madison.com/tct/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/73
Author: Megan Doughty
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hea.htm
(Higher Education Act)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Mark+Souder
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm
(Youth)
Financial Aid Loss Under Review
WASHINGTON - When 20-year-old Nathan Bush was pulled over in Kenosha last
October with drug paraphernalia plainly visible in his car, he lost his
driver's license - and tens of thousands of dollars in financial aid.
Bush, an incoming junior at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said he could
have been slapped with the far more serious charge of possession of marijuana,
but instead had all of his federal dollars taken away in courtroom
negotiations.
"Of course, I can't pick up that kind of slack," Bush said, adding
that state aid covers only about half of the $15,000 a year he pays for his
education. "So it all just falls on my parents, which I'm not proud
of. But I just can't come up with that kind of money."
According to Students for a Sensible Drug Policy, the federal government since
1998 has refused educational aid to more than 160,000 students like Bush,
including many who were convicted of drug-related offenses before their
initial application for aid.
As part of this year's reauthorization of the Higher Education Act, which a
congressional committee is expected to consider this week, the so-called
"retroactivity clause" could be repealed - in other words, the
government could no longer legally withhold tuition assistance from students
who were convicted of drug-related offenses before they filed their first
application.
Tom Angell of SSDP said the measure is inadequate and called for broader
legislation that would loosen the restrictions on students, like Bush, who are
convicted while in school.
"While we welcome the change and think that it will help many students,
there are still others who will be losing their aid," Angell said.
"It's sort of like putting a Band-Aid on a gaping wound."
Rep. Tammy Baldwin, D-Madison, is one of 68 co-sponsors of a bill
supported by the student group that would abolish the government's right to
deny financial aid based on drug-related offenses, even if a student is
convicted while enrolled in college.
Baldwin called the current law "incredibly inconsistent" because it
targets even the most casual of drug users while ignoring convictions for
violent crime.
"There's no prohibition on somebody who has been convicted of rape or
murder," Baldwin said. "In practice, this is most likely to
affect somebody who had one instance of illegal behavior during their
youth."
Margaret Reiter, president of the UW-Madison chapter of the student group,
added that many students probably don't report drug convictions because they
doubt the Department of Education will investigate their past.
"It's only the honest students who are going to get punished,"
Reiter said. "They think it would be a huge waste of time and money
for the government to go checking them out."
The original law that allowed the Department of Education to "suspend
eligibility for drug-related offenses" was passed seven years ago as part
of the reauthorization of the Higher Education Act, which was originally
crafted in 1965 to facilitate college education for low-income and minority
students.
Rep. Mark Souder, R-Ind., introduced the drug-related provision.
Souder spokesman Martin Green said the logic behind the legislation is quite
simple.
"Students who receive taxpayer dollars to go to college are not making
the most of it by taking drugs," Green said. "It's one thing
if they're paying for their education or if their parents are paying for it,
but it's unfair to ask taxpayers to foot the bill for a student with a drug
habit."
The bill was also designed, Green said, as a preventative measure under the
assumption that students hoping to receive financial aid would be less likely
to use and sell drugs.
Angell takes issue with this reasoning, arguing that "the provision is
only a deterrent to recovery and education."
Souder and Angell agree, however, on one surprising point. Green said
Souder, as an Evangelical Christian who believes strongly in redemption, never
intended for the bill to behave retroactively and neither did the two chambers
of Congress when they passed it. That interpretation of the enforcement
plan was made, he said, by the Clinton administration just before the bill was
signed into law.
"Congressman Souder was outraged, of course, when the enforcement
regulations were released, and he's been working ever since then to overturn
that provision," Green said. "He's pleased that he has
bipartisan support to restore the original intent of Congress."
Under the original bill, a student convicted of a drug-related crime was
disqualified for financial aid from the date of conviction until a date
determined based on number of prior convictions and nature of the crime.
A student convicted of possession of a controlled substance for the first
time, for example, loses eligibility for one year while a student caught
selling for the second time is disqualified indefinitely.
Green said the language was not intended to exclude students applying for
financial aid after their convictions, regardless of how recently they were in
court.
But like Angell, Bush said he feels "hurt" by the measure as a whole
and will continue to oppose it, whether or not it behaves retroactively.
"I just feel like there's no compassion in that law," Bush said.
"It's just one strike and you're out. There are a lot of smart kids
who smoke marijuana at Madison, and they're going to lose their money just for
that? It really hurts me."
Bush, who graduated high school in Paddock Lake with a 3.8 GPA and considers
himself a good student as a kinesiology and nutritional science major, said he
attends weekly drug court and counseling sessions and is now drug free.
He added that he is not sure when he will regain his financial aid but
emphasized that he is eager to. He feels guilty, he said, because his
parents already paid his legal bills on top of financing his sister's college
education.
"I'll just keep applying every year and hoping," Bush said.
