Pubdate: Wed, 19 Apr 2006
Source: Daily Vanguard (Portland State, OR Edu)
Copyright: 2006 Daily Vanguard
Contact:  http://www.dailyvanguard.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2834
Author: Christie Toth
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

OREGON RANKS SECOND IN FINANCIAL AID DENIAL FOR DRUGS

According To Report 190,000 Students Denied Aid Nationally Over Span 
Of Five Years

Oregon ranked second highest out of the 50 states among  financial 
aid applicants denied because they responded  yes to a conviction of 
selling or possessing drugs.

On April 12, the U.S. Department of Education released  the 
state-by-state breakdown of the number of federal  financial aid 
applicants denied either part of or all  of their financial aid 
award. In 2005, when the  drug-conviction amendment came up for 
reconsideration,  it was modified to deny aid only to those students 
convicted of drug sales or possession while in college.  Past 
convictions will no longer be held against  financial aid applicants.

Between August 2000 and August 2005, the years during  which the 
drug-conviction penalty was in effect, 3,637  applicants for federal 
financial aid in Oregon were  denied financial aid. A total of 
997,710 Oregonians  applied for federal financial aid, meaning that 
0.36 percent of Oregon applicants lost aid because of drug convictions.

All told, nearly 190,000 students, or 0.25 percent of  federal 
financial aid applicants from U.S. states and  territories, lost aid 
because of their responses to the  drug question while the 
drug-conviction policy was in  effect.

California and Washington also ranked high among the 50  states, with 
the third and fourth highest drug-related  aid denial rates. Indiana 
had the highest percentage of  applicants denied, 0.50 percent, of any state.

Although Portland State is the largest university in  the state that 
ranked second for drug-related aid  denials, it is difficult to gauge 
the extent to which  Portland State students have been affected by 
the law.  The Office of Institutional Planning and Research 
does  measure the number of students denied federal financial  aid, 
but does not track the reasons for each denial and  could not report 
on how many Portland State students  had lost aid because of drug convictions.

"I'm not aware of many people here being affected,"  said Kenneth 
McGhee of the financial aid office. "Two  or three years ago, one 
person did come in concerned  about the drug question, but that 
person ended up being  eligible for aid. Some people fill out the 
form and get  denied, so they either don't go, or they self-pay, 
but  they don't ask us directly. People don't usually show  up [at 
the financial aid office] with questions about  the drug issue."

"A lot of people, myself included, feel that you  shouldn't hold 
people's pasts against them," McGhee  said.

The Department of Education released the numbers after  legal 
wrangling with the nonprofit group Students for  Sensible Drug Policy 
(SSDP), represented by Public  Citizen, a consumer advocacy 
organization. In 2004,  SSDP filed a Freedom of Information Act 
request for the  figures, which the department refused on the grounds 
that the information would serve the commercial  interests of those 
who would benefit from the  legalization of drugs. The department 
attempted to  charge SSDP a fee of $4,000 for the data, but backed 
down in order to avoid a court battle when SSDP sued.

The drug-conviction financial aid penalty came into  being as a 1998 
House amendment to the reauthorization  of the Higher Education Act, 
which was first enacted in  1965 to provide federal financial aid for 
college  students. The amendment denied federal financial aid to 
anyone who had ever been convicted of possessing or  selling drugs.

During the 2000-01 school year, the first year the  drug-conviction 
question appeared on the Free  Application for Federal Student Aid 
(FAFSA), the  Clinton administration approved aid for the nearly 
300,000 applicants who did not answer the question.

The following year, however, the Bush administration  reversed this 
policy, making students who did not  answer the question subject to 
the same follow-up  questionnaire and possible denial as those who 
answered  yes.

The Department of Education has no way of verifying  most students' 
responses to the FAFSA drug question.  The only applicants whose 
records they can crosscheck  are those with federal arrest records, 
which make up a  very small percentage of total drug convictions in 
the  United States.

The numbers released by the Department of Education  last Wednesday 
reflect the percentage of applicants in  Oregon and other states who 
were denied aid because  they admitted to having drug convictions on 
the FAFSA,  not the actual percentage of applicants who had drug 
convictions in their past.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman