WASHINGTON - July 31 - Today, the
American Civil Liberties Union expressed its disappointment in Congress for
failing to repeal the aid elimination penalty in the reauthorization of the
Higher Education Act (HEA). The aid elimination penalty bars students with drug
convictions – often minor, first time and misdemeanor offenses – from receiving
critical college aid.
“It has now been ten years since
Congress first passed the aid elimination penalty into law, and in that decade,
more than 200,000 would-be students have seen the doors of educational
opportunity slammed shut,” said Caroline Fredrickson, director of the ACLU
Washington Legislative Office. “Access to education and the opportunity to
better oneself should not be wielded as a weapon in the war on
drugs.”
Fredrickson added, “Congress should
have given greater consideration to how many would-be students, particularly
those from lower income families, will fail to overcome this particularly harsh
penalty for relatively minor, isolated transgressions. How many will be forced
to drop out of school due to a lack of financial resources? How many could have
flourished if only we had the wisdom to provide them with the same access to
college aid offered to other students.”
The ACLU's Drug Law Reform Project
represented Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP), its more than 100 chapters
nationwide and three individual students in a legal challenge to the aid
elimination penalty contained in the HEA (SSDP, et. al. v. Spellings). The
plaintiffs sought an injunction to prevent the enforcement of the law on the
grounds that it violates the double jeopardy clause and the equal protection
component of the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution. On April 29, 2008, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth
Circuit affirmed a district court decision rejecting these legal
challenges.
“In the aftermath of the court’s
failure to remedy this misguided and unconstitutional policy, congressional
action was the last remaining hope for students impacted by the penalty,” said
Graham Boyd, director of the ACLU Drug Law Reform Project. “The failure to
address this fundamentally ineffective and unfair penalty will mean that many
more students will see the doors of educational opportunity and the promise of a
better life closed to them.”
According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, high school graduates not
enrolled in college are three times more likely than those in school to have
used methamphetamine or heroin in the past year. Denying educational
opportunities to those with drug convictions simply makes them more susceptible
to drug abuse, addiction and repeat offenses.
For More
Information:
http://www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/youth/36033leg20080707.html
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