HEA Aid Elimination Penalty
From SSDPedia
Since 2000, students with drug convictions have been blocked access to federal financial aid as a result of a little known provision of the Higher Education Act (HEA). Added as a committee amendment in 1998, the Aid Elimination Penalty slipped into the 257-page HEA reauthorization bill without debate or a recorded vote.
Unfortunately, many members of Congress and financial aid administrators were unaware of this change in the law until long after its passage. To date, nearly 200,000 students have been ineligible for federal loans, grants, and work-study because of the HEA Aid Elimination Penalty.
In early 2006, SSDP and our allies forced Congress to scale back the law, so that only people who are convicted while in college and receiving financial aid will have their eligibility taken away. Now, people who got convicted before they decided to go to college will be able to move on with their lives and earn an education.
Unfortunately, college students who get convicted will still lose their aid, and many of them will have to drop out. Statistics and common sense tell us that it simply doesn't make sense to pull students out of school if we want to reduce drug abuse and encourage young people to become successful citizens.









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