NEWS ADVISORY
CONTACT:
Shawn Heller 202-293-4414
Adam Eidinger 202-232-8997
August 28, 2002
NOT ALL STUDENTS WILL START SCHOOL THIS
WEEK
87,000 Lost College Financial Aid Due to Drug Convictions
WASHINGTON, DC According to new Department
of Education data, over 30,000 college students have been denied
federal loans and grants for the 2002-2003 school year due to
the 1998 Higher Education Act drug provision. Since the HEA drug
provision was first enforced in 2000, a total of 86,898 students
have been denied aid. A drug conviction is the only crime that
can result in the loss of federal financial aid.
The latest Department of Education
statistics confirm that the punitive HEA drug provision remains
the number one obstacle for people seeking a higher education,
says Shawn Heller, National Director of Students for Sensible
Drug Policy. Since African Americans make up half of all
people convicted of drug crimes, yet only represent 13% of all
drug users, its evident that this regulation disproportionately
punishes minorities. Tens of thousands more have likely not bothered
to apply for college because they know they wont receive
loans or grants. SSDP is working on 500 campuses to end this education
disaster, says Heller.
Students for Sensible Drug Policy has 148
officially recognized chapters on college campuses across the
country, but the network is expected to grow this fall. SSDP
has experience phenomenal growth due to a student backlash to
the HEA Drug Provision and we know of students on 350 other campuses
who are working establish new SSDP chapters this fall, says
Darrell Rogers, SSDP National Outreach Coordinator.
SSDP organizers are gearing up for protests
and civil disobedience this fall to increase public pressure on
law makers to repeal the HEA drug provision. Amanda Brazel, a
senior at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan, says, I
believe in equality, freedom, and truth, values that are lost
in the war on drugs, values worth working to restore. Brazel
knows numerous people who have been impacted by the legislation.
Im one of those people who thinks I need to stand
up and do something about Americas un-American war on its
own citizens.
In the past couple years, members of Congress
have taken notice of the terrible impact the HEA drug provision
has had on middle and lower income students. Even the author of
the HEA Drug Provision, Rep. Mark Souder (R-IN), asked the Department
of Education to find ways to reduce the number students affected,
but the agency has concluded that only congressional action can
reduce the huge number of students that are denied a chance to
improve there lives.
In a letter sent by the Coalition for Higher
Education Act Reform to Congress in May, 41 national education,
civil rights and drug policy organizations including SSDP, the
National Education Association, the NAACP, the ACLU, the United
States Student Association, the Leadership Conference on Civil
Rights, Drug Policy Alliance, the Association for Addiction Professionals,
and the National Black Police Association, urged full repeal of
the Higher Education Act Drug Provision (visit www.RaiseYourVoice.com/Letter/
to see the letter). A bill to repeal the drug provision, H.R.
786, has 68 sponsors, but is unlikely to be passed before the
107th Congress dissolves at the end of this year.
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