Pubdate: Fri, 26 May 2000
Source: Bellingham Herald (WA)
Copyright: 2000 Bellingham Herald
Contact:  P.O. Box 1277, Bellingham, WA 98227
Fax: (360) 647-9260
Feedback: http://www.bellinghamherald.com/contactus/letter-to-editor-direct.htm
Website: http://www.bellinghamherald.com/
Author: Penny F. Stone
Cited: Students for Sensible Drug Policy: http://www.ssdp.org/
Cited: The November Coalition: http://www.november.org/

STUDENTS SEEK REFORM OF U.S. DRUG WAR

SOCIAL ISSUES: Group Says Denying Financial Aid Does Not Solve Problem.

TYREE CALLAHAN -- mad and frustrated about his father's imprisonment on 
drug charges -- is channeling those emotions into political action against 
what he calls the country's out-of-control drug war.

"It's amazing the damage to society that the war on drugs is causing," said 
Callahan, a 27-year-old Whatcom Community College student whose father has 
been in federal prison the past decade serving a 27-year sentence for 
conspiring to sell drugs.

To push for drug reform, Callahan and Western Washington University student 
Kevin Feeney started a group this spring, the WWU Drug Policy Reform 
Organization.

"I've wanted to start a student group for a long time to show what impact 
students can have on drug reform with their legislators," Callahan said.

One of the group's first accomplishments was to have a resolution passed 
earlier this month by the Associated Students at Western.

The resolution urges the repeal of a provision in the federal Higher 
Education Act of 1998 that delays or denies federal financial aid 
eligibility to people convicted of state or federal drug offenses.

The provision doesn't apply to alcohol or tobacco, doesn't include 
convictions that have been removed from records, and doesn't apply to 
convictions that occurred before the age of 18, unless the person was tried 
in adult court.

Under the provision, students convicted of drug possession will lose aid 
for one year at the first offense, two years for the second, and 
indefinitely for the third offense.

Students convicted of selling illegal drugs face a two-year suspension for 
the first offense and indefinite suspension for a subsequent offense. The 
provision takes effect July 1.

Callahan and Feeney say the provision imposes a blanket prohibition on 
financial aid to offenders, eliminating judicial discretion for individual 
cases.

"Since I've been studying race, class and gender issues, I see the deeper 
effects of the way drug laws are implemented," said Feeney, a junior 
majoring in law and diversity. "They are racist, and target lower classes 
and minorities. The people who are most affected by this provision are from 
lower economic classes, and they're the ones that need the financial aid."

Feeney said the provision sends a confused message about the drug war.

"The perception is they're trying to help people from negative consequences 
of drug use," he said. "But denying an education is not furthering a 
person's ability to become a productive member of society."

The student club, along with the national chapter of Students for Sensible 
Drug Policy on Campus, drafted the resolution. More than 150 campuses are 
involved in the campaign, and 21 student bodies have endorsed similar 
resolutions.

The club put the resolution before the student council at Whatcom Community 
College this week for a vote, and plans to present it to the faculty senate 
at Western, too.

Members want to address other issues, too, such as mandatory minimum 
sentences, distinguishing between hard and soft drugs, and medical use of 
marijuana.

Callahan and Feeney favor would they call "harm reduction" strategies.

"The punishment for use of drugs shouldn't be any greater than the harm 
that can be caused by the use of the drug," Feeney said. "We think there 
should be more treatment than incarceration."

Callahan, who wants to pursue a career in criminal justice, is a regional 
leader of November Coalition, a group formed in 1995 by his father and aunt 
that involves prisoners and their loved ones in advocating for drug reforms.

"It's not easy having someone you really love be in jail that long," said 
Callahan, who was 16 when his father was imprisoned. "I was so mad when he 
was taken away, but I've been able to turn it into a positive experience 
and use it as a way to change the laws."

Whom To Call:

People interested in the WWU Drug Policy Reform Organization should call 
650-0748.

A Web site -- http://www.raiseyourvoice.com -- contains details about a 
federal proposal to overturn the drug provision that delays or denies 
federal financial aid eligibility to people convicted of state or federal 
drug offenses.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake