Friend,
You know that the impact of the drug war reaches far beyond the criminal legal system into almost every aspect of our society.
That’s why I wanted to make sure you saw the recent email from my colleague Grant Smith, about a major win over the holidays. Working with a coalition of partners, DPA successfully persuaded Congress to reinstate Pell Grants for people behind bars and repeal the “drug question” which made students ineligible for federal financial aid if they had been convicted of a drug crime.
Friend, this is a huge step forward – millions of people will be impacted by these reforms. But there is still so much work to be done. We need your support to continue to unravel this far-reaching drug war.
Donate Now: [link removed]
If you have a drug-related conviction, you can be denied access to health services, housing, or employment. Even with this win, the drug war still creates barriers to education.
We need to make sure that no one is arrested for drug possession in the first place. And we need your support to do it. Please make a donation today.
Donate Now: [link removed]
With gratitude,
Joe Salas
Membership Director
Drug Policy Alliance
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BEGIN FORWARDED MESSAGE
From: Grant Smith - Drug Policy Alliance
Sent: Wednesday, January 6, 2021
To:
[email protected]
Subject: Congress restores aid for students with drug convictions
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Friend,
We won a major federal victory just a couple weeks ago and I wanted to make sure you didn’t miss it. The year-end omnibus spending package passed by Congress included provisions lifting decades-long bans on student financial aid for people behind bars and those with drug convictions: [link removed]
The bill reinstates Pell Grants for incarcerated people [link removed], lifting the 1994 Crime Bill ban on federal financial aid for students in prisons. It also repeals the 1998 Aid Elimination Penalty [link removed], a federal law that made students ineligible for federal financial aid if they had been convicted of a drug crime (also known as the “drug question” on the federal student aid, or FAFSA, form).
The repeal of these harmful policies is a major step forward in the fight to end the drug war and ensure that no one’s access to health services, education, housing, or employment is ever restricted due to their involvement with drugs.
No one should be denied access to education because of a criminal record. Yet for more than twenty years, these policies have punished students who rely on federal aid to attend college and disproportionately harmed Black and Brown people targeted by drug enforcement.
Congress imposed these restrictions during the 1990s escalation of the drug war and tough-on-crime era, and in the years since, thousands of students who rely on federal aid have been denied educational opportunities increasingly essential to successful employment.
After years of working with our coalition of partners, we’re proud to have played a pivotal role in this win which will have a lasting impact on people’s lives. This victory would not have been possible without the leadership of directly impacted people and currently and formerly incarcerated advocates.
We are grateful to have worked with Congress to remove these cruel and counterproductive barriers to education. But there remains much work to be done. Please make a donation today: [link removed] to help fully dismantle the war on drugs and other destructive tough-on-crime policies.
Sincerely,
Grant Smith
Deputy Director, National Affairs
Drug Policy Alliance
The Drug Policy Alliance depends entirely on private donations to fund our work to end the war on drugs and promote new drug policies grounded in science, compassion, health, and human rights. Your support is crucial [link removed] – thank you!
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