Pubdate: Fri, 26 Jan 2007
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2007 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Seema Mehta, Times Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hea.htm (Higher Education Act)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States)

BERKELEY STUDENTS COUNTER DRUG RULE

Student Government Will Let Those With a Conviction Apply for a 
Stipend, Something the U.S. Won't Let Them Have.

Some UC Berkeley students who are denied federal financial aid 
because of a drug conviction will be eligible for a new scholarship 
funded by the student government, the organization decided this week. 
Though the stipends are only $400, supporters say they are a symbolic 
protest against a law they call unjust.

"It's a very poor way for the government to fight the war on drugs," 
said David Israel Wasserman, a senior political science major and the 
senator in the Associated Students who wrote the resolution. "I don't 
think that the government should find more and more ways to deprive 
students of a means to an education."

David Murray, chief scientist with the White House Office on National 
Drug Control Policy, called the Berkeley effort "misguided," saying 
federal aid is a privilege and that the government has an obligation 
to use whatever means necessary to dissuade young people from using drugs.

"If you are enabling self-destructive behavior by supporting it, 
condoning it or even paying for it, you're probably not helping the 
person get the help they need to deal with their disease," he said.

As tuition costs have skyrocketed, students are increasingly relying 
on financial assistance. Nearly two-thirds of undergraduates in 
2003-04 received government or private aid, according to the U.S. 
Department of Education. Last year, the federal government gave out 
$82 billion in grants, loans and other assistance to more than 10 
million students.

A drug conviction after a student begins receiving aid is the only 
crime that cuts off the federal money, a penalty that lasts at least 
a year. Students with three drug-use convictions or two drug-sale 
convictions are permanently ineligible. The lesser offenders can 
regain eligibility by completing drug treatment programs.

Since the law took effect in 2000, more than 189,000 students have 
been deemed ineligible because they admitted to a conviction or 
refused to provide the information on aid applications, according to 
the Education Department. California has a disproportionately high 
rate: one in every 278 applicants, 44% higher than the national average.

It's unknown how many of Berkeley's 34,000 students the rule has 
affected, but in the late 1990s, the school was known for having more 
campus drug arrests than nearly every other four-year institution in 
the country.

On Wednesday, the Associated Students board voted unanimously to give 
at least one $400 scholarship per year to a student who loses 
eligibility for federal aid because of a drug conviction. The 
recipient must maintain a 2.5 grade-point average, perform 20 hours 
of community service and have the "moral obligation" to contribute to 
the scholarship program after graduation, "once they find themselves 
in the financial position to be of assistance to the program."

The money, which can be spent only on college-related expenses, will 
come from the Associated Students' $1.5-million annual budget. The 
organization's funding comes from an activities fee students pay.

UC Berkeley officials who could comment on the matter couldn't be 
reached Thursday. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake