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News (Media Awareness Project) - US PA: Edu: Suit Seeks Aid For Drug Convicts
Title:US PA: Edu: Suit Seeks Aid For Drug Convicts
Published On:2006-04-06
Source:Daily Pennsylvanian, The (PA Edu)
Fetched On:2008-01-14 08:30:38
SUIT SEEKS AID FOR DRUG CONVICTS

ACLU: Government Can't Deny Financial Aid To Students With
Drug-Related Convictions

A student organization is teaming up with the American Civil
Liberties Union to overturn a federal law that denies financial aid
to students with drug convictions.

Students for Sensible Drug Policy and the ACLU recently filed a
class-action lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Education,
saying that the law is unconstitutional.

According to the suit, the federal law illegally penalizes students
twice for the same crime.

U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings is named as a defendant.

"The department supports Congress' efforts to decrease illegal drug
use and protect the health and safety of our students," Department
of Education spokeswoman Valerie Smith said. "We will carefully
review their complaint."

Congress passed the law in an attempt to fight drug use, but
opponents believe it has had the opposite effect.

"It's more likely that while they're not in college, they'll receive
another drug conviction instead of becoming a productive member of
society," said College sophomore Taylor Cashwell, who attempted to
create an Students for Sensible Drug Policy chapter at Penn that
never materialized.

Congress has since amended the law to include students who are
already receiving aid when they are convicted.

Three students who lost financial aid due to misdemeanor drug
convictions are already named as plaintiffs, though SSDP and the
ACLU are seeking others.

The three will represent about 200,000 students with drug
convictions who have lost financial aid since the first version of
the law was enacted in 1998.

Though Cashwell said he isn't personally affected by the law, he
became interested in the issue after a friend of his couldn't
receive financial aid because of the statute.

SSDP Campaigns Director Tom Angell said that the law
disproportionately leaves working class families, who often rely on
financial aid to pay tuition, at a disadvantage.

SSDP has been lobbying Congress to change the law for the past eight
years, but Angell said members of Congress were unresponsive to its efforts.

As the ACLU's Drug Law Reform Project's staff expanded, he said,
more resources became available to take the issue to the courts.

"Murderers and rapists are eligible to receive financial aid, but a
student caught with a single marijuana cigarette is denied," Angell said.
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