News (Media Awareness Project) - US IL: Edu: Panel Criticizes Illinois' Policies On Drugs, Crime |
Title: | US IL: Edu: Panel Criticizes Illinois' Policies On Drugs, Crime |
Published On: | 2007-04-03 |
Source: | Daily Illini, The (U of IL at Urbana-Champaign, Edu) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 09:06:23 |
PANEL CRITICIZES ILLINOIS' POLICIES ON DRUGS, CRIME
Walter Boyd was convicted for a drug-related crime in 1976. He served
in a corrections facility for 24 years. Tuesday night he informed a
crowd of University students and community members that non-white
individuals were 57 times more likely to be arrested for drug-related,
non-violent crimes than white individuals.
Boyd, who now serves as a representative for the Protestants for the
Common Good in Chicago, was a member of a panel addressing racial
disparities in incarceration in Illinois Tuesday evening at Saunders
Lounge in Pennsylvania Avenue Residence Hall. Adam Wolf of the
American Civil Liberties Union Drug Law Reform Project in Santa Cruz,
Cali., was the other speaker.
The panel was presented by the Illinois Drug Education and Legislative
Reform organization and the Coalition of Students for Social Change,
along with 10 Registered Student Organizations.
The purpose of hosting the panel was to educate and enable people to
look at legislative policies, specifically drug policies, with a more
critical eye, said Shaleen Aghi, graduate student in law and leader of
the Coalition of Students for Social Change.
"Our drug policy is flawed," Boyd said at the discussion.
Aghi said the goal of holding the panel was to eliminate the stigma
associated with altering drug policies.
An example she gave at the discussion was the Higher Education Act,
which provides financial assistance for college students. However, any
student with drug convictions is denied access to financial aid for
college despite the fact convicted criminals could still receive
financial aid.
"What I wanted was for people to see that reforming drug laws is not
about trying to legalize marijuana," she said.
The act forces low to middle income students with any drug-related
background to drop out of college, which hinders the war on drugs
because college students use fewer drugs than people who are of the
same age and not in school, she said.
"I don't have much faith in the federal government at this moment,"
Wolf said.
The panel also discussed selective enforcement, when police patrol
certain neighborhoods, often predominantly black ones.
"This is a really important social justice issue in Illinois," Aghi
said.
Dorothea Galdo, senior in LAS, attended the panel and said she was
surprised to find the judicial system to be discriminatory towards
minorities.
"I'm really interested in social stratification, so learning about the
disparities within the drug usage and arrests and drug crimes was very
educational, very surprising," Galdo said.
"People care," Aghi said. "No one wants to be in a state leading a
country in racial disparities in prisons."
Walter Boyd was convicted for a drug-related crime in 1976. He served
in a corrections facility for 24 years. Tuesday night he informed a
crowd of University students and community members that non-white
individuals were 57 times more likely to be arrested for drug-related,
non-violent crimes than white individuals.
Boyd, who now serves as a representative for the Protestants for the
Common Good in Chicago, was a member of a panel addressing racial
disparities in incarceration in Illinois Tuesday evening at Saunders
Lounge in Pennsylvania Avenue Residence Hall. Adam Wolf of the
American Civil Liberties Union Drug Law Reform Project in Santa Cruz,
Cali., was the other speaker.
The panel was presented by the Illinois Drug Education and Legislative
Reform organization and the Coalition of Students for Social Change,
along with 10 Registered Student Organizations.
The purpose of hosting the panel was to educate and enable people to
look at legislative policies, specifically drug policies, with a more
critical eye, said Shaleen Aghi, graduate student in law and leader of
the Coalition of Students for Social Change.
"Our drug policy is flawed," Boyd said at the discussion.
Aghi said the goal of holding the panel was to eliminate the stigma
associated with altering drug policies.
An example she gave at the discussion was the Higher Education Act,
which provides financial assistance for college students. However, any
student with drug convictions is denied access to financial aid for
college despite the fact convicted criminals could still receive
financial aid.
"What I wanted was for people to see that reforming drug laws is not
about trying to legalize marijuana," she said.
The act forces low to middle income students with any drug-related
background to drop out of college, which hinders the war on drugs
because college students use fewer drugs than people who are of the
same age and not in school, she said.
"I don't have much faith in the federal government at this moment,"
Wolf said.
The panel also discussed selective enforcement, when police patrol
certain neighborhoods, often predominantly black ones.
"This is a really important social justice issue in Illinois," Aghi
said.
Dorothea Galdo, senior in LAS, attended the panel and said she was
surprised to find the judicial system to be discriminatory towards
minorities.
"I'm really interested in social stratification, so learning about the
disparities within the drug usage and arrests and drug crimes was very
educational, very surprising," Galdo said.
"People care," Aghi said. "No one wants to be in a state leading a
country in racial disparities in prisons."
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