April 17, 2006

WINNING THE CULTURE WARS:

Drug convictions costing students their financial aid (Donna Leinwand, 4/17/2006 , USA TODAY)

One in every 400 students applying for federal financial aid for college is rejected because of a drug conviction, an analysis of Department of Education numbers by a drug policy overhaul group found.

A study to be released today by Students for Sensible Drug Policy says 189,065 people have been turned down for financial aid since the federal government added a drug conviction question to the financial aid form in the 2000-01school year.

A September report from the Government Accountability Office shows that in the 2003-04 academic year, about 41,000 applicants for federal student aid were disqualified because of drug convictions.

A student can regain eligibility, however, by completing a rehabilitation program that includes random drug tests.

"In the majority of cases, students retain their eligibility," Education Department spokeswoman Valerie Smith says.

Posted by Orrin Judd at April 17, 2006 8:48 AM
Comments

How many passes can a 'student' get?

Posted by: erp at April 17, 2006 10:20 AM
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