BY A. BRAD SCHWARTZ
Daily Staff Reporter
Published November 7, 2010
Though loud music and red cups are Football Saturday staples, fraternity members say they are being punished for taking part in these traditions and they’re tired of it.
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Hoping to curb what it sees as a rise in noise and trash violations issued to fraternities on game days, a small group of representatives from the Michigan Student Assembly and the Interfraternity Council met with Ann Arbor Police Department Deputy Chief John Seto in MSA Chambers Friday.
“What we want to do is come out, as a group, from this meeting with some ideas, some helpful hints, that we can put together… for students to best follow the law (and) to best avoid getting violations,” Brendan Friedman, chair of the Greek Relations Select Committee, said at the meeting.
Seto said noise violations are generally the result of complaints from neighbors — including religious institutions that hold services on Saturdays — but that officers can issue a ticket proactively, especially in the case of a dangerously large pregame party.
“Crowd size is a big issue,” he said, adding that the fights and unrestricted alcohol use that tend to occur with large crowd sizes are “not acceptable.”
But students at the meeting expressed a desire for more specifics as to how to avoid receiving tickets.
Peri Silverman, vice chair of the Greek Relations Select Committee, said committee members have often felt that police officers failed to give them adequate explanations for why they were ticketed in the past.
“People aren’t able to gauge the situation,” she said.
According to Title IX, Chapter 119 of the Ann Arbor City Code, residents can be ticketed for a noise violation if any music or noise can be heard beyond the property line. However, Seto said enforcement of the ordinance is up to an officer’s discretion.
“You’re not going to get a ticket every time,” he said.
In September 2009, several houses on the 900 block of South State Street received a letter from a City of Ann Arbor attorney, who warned students that their landlords would be sued if they continued to litter, cause excessive noise and supply alcohol to minors on Football Saturdays.
Seto said there has been an improvement in student behavior since past game days, when the size of parties near the intersection of South State Street and East Hoover Avenue had presented serious safety concerns in the eyes of police.
During the game against Michigan State University last month, police gave only two tickets at that intersection. In one instance, the students had disregarded a previous warning from police, and the other resulted from a student throwing a beer can at an officer, which Seto said will always result in a ticket.
During the discussion, the group also talked about littering violations issued by police on Football Saturdays for red cups and bottles strewn on lawns. Seto said litter violations are different from noise violations and that the ordinance is based on “community standards.”
“Citizens cannot understand why students can’t put their trash in the trash bins,” he said.
Students expressed a willingness to clean up after their own parties but felt that they weren’t given enough time to do so before they were given tickets.
Seto responded that the ordinance was intended to prevent trash from blowing onto neighboring yards, and that the amount of trash — rather than how long it had been outside — was the determining factor in issuing a violation. He suggested that students take their concerns to the Ann Arbor City Council and attempt to revise the ordinance.
Andy Snow, a member the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity, expressed frustration that there appears to be a double standard in enforcement.





















