Despite all the positive signs throughout the 2008-2009 academic year, this semester will now likely end without any change to the three-person housing rule in the City of Williamsburg. This is extremely unfortunate, especially for the students who have committed a significant portion of their time this year to finding a solution for the benefit of future students.
But the saddest thing of all is that now, all responsibility rests with the city, and their defense of their position has been disingenuous and reprehensible. Consider a recent editorial, “Now you tell us,” in the Virginia Gazette, a Williamsburg newspaper that hasn’t reported an accurate story since the Battle of Yorktown.
The editorial’s author makes a number of comical assertions, including one that claims that students only move off campus because they are underage and want to drink — most people I know who live off campus are over 21. He also argues that since students put their infomation on MySpace and Facebook anyway, the College of William and Mary should not be hesitant about giving off-campus student addresses to the city.
The last point he makes is that at Christopher Newport University, the administration is willing to “box the ears of the bad boys” who act up in surrounding neighborhoods, and he argues that “unlike here, CNU requires students to behave like grown-ups.”
I’m not even sure where to start here. Something gives me the feeling that trying to convince the College’s administration to become more like CNU’s is a losing effort, but that’s just a wild guess. The Facebook argument doesn’t hold any merit because, regardless of what someone chooses to include on social-networking websites, the College can withhold this information from the city in accordance with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, a federal law designed to protect the private and educational information of students.
What this editorial does reveal, however, is how the City and the students have approached this issue from exactly opposite directions. City residents see this as an opportunity to guilt-trip the College administration into creating an office that will monitor off-campus addresses and student behavior, while students are trying to negotiate a slight change to a policy that only affects them, and is, in the final analysis, legalized discrimination. The City blames the College for the fact that its students refuse to adhere to an ordinance that makes it more difficult for students to live in the Williamsburg community. Even for Williamsburg, this is pretty low.
If the ignorant author of the Virginia Gazette editorial is reflective of the majority of the residents of Williamsburg, then I don’t have much hope at all. But assuming, for the sake of argument, that there are some residents who understand how immoral the law is and who aren’t firmly against students living among them, how would a solution be reached now?
The only reason that this focus group was created was because students spooked the city during the last City Council election with high numbers of registered student-voters. If Matt Beato ’09 had not come so close to winning a seat on City Council — he lost by three percentage points in the popular vote — it is unlikely the city would take the clout of student voters seriously. But over the past few years, they have had to do so.
The most significant shift in the status quo would occur if a student could be elected to City Council. This will require a massive get-out-the-vote effort to ensure that there are enough students to get the candidate elected. While it makes sense in principle to knock on doors and present one’s case to city residents, Beato, despite being incredibly knowledgeable about community issues, was unable to gain much traction in precincts without student voters.
Why would any student be able to attract a large percentage of city votes? A more effective strategy would give priority to rallying student voters — hosting events, planning massive election-day activities and publicity, etc.
Students involved in the town-gown work over the past few years should be incredibly proud, despite the lack of material results. Showing the moral cowardice of the city and several of its residents through attempted negotiations, the students have sent a reminder to all concerned of where the blame for these issues lies.
E-mail Alexander Ely at anelyx@wm.edu.


5 Comments
lol @ Joe
lol @ Joe Hertzler
Especially at the way he referred to our “behaviour.” I thought we shook off British oppression centuries ago!
As a transfer student to
As a transfer student to William and Mary FROM Christopher Newport University I’d love to hear where they got the idea that students there are “required to act like grown ups.” Must have been another great line from President Trible (or just made up altogether, close enough). At Christopher Newport University students DO move off to drink because the campus gives them no option thanks to a rather archaic dry campus policy which results in the wild parties at “Port” (Port Warwick). CNU does not treat their students as adults but instead slaps on annoying policies like we are children. What do children do when trapped by excessive rules? Act out.
While I have just arrived here in Williamsburg this semester I can already see the difference. The students here are different and, be it the Honor Code or whatever the College would like to it attribute to, are allowed this privilege of a wet campus among others. The College, with as much clout as it as, obviously trusts us enough to allow these ‘freedoms’ (I say that for the simple fact at CNU you had a dry campus and a ton of hoops to go through just to let guests inside dorms!) so why wouldn’t the City Council of Williamsburg?
Joe Hertzler, who is on the
Joe Hertzler, who is on the Williamsburg Planning Commission also has his own take:
http://blogwilliamsburg.net/index.php/wcp/discussion/3_person_rule_editorial_by_alex_ely_in_flat_hat/
Though I can say with confidence that 99 percent of the students at this school act responsibly and would not be a problem had they the choice to live off campus, he pigeonholes all students as a bunch of rowdy street thugs. He says: “You choose to party. You choose to make noise late into the night, to leave trash around the street.” He continues: “What we dislike is the noise, the mess, and the disregard for our homes. These are our homes. Most of you have never had a home.”
Most of us have never had a home? What is that supposed to mean? According to Hertzler, it sounds like all 5000+ undergrads and 2000+ grad students are out roaming the streets every night causing mayhem and trying to burn the whole city down. If Williamsburg were host to a larger typical state university, people like Hertzler would be in for a real surprise. I don’t know of any students here that spend most of their nights doing anything other than studying.
It’s hard to believe people as draconian and closed-minded as this are running this city. There should be a concerted effort to get at least one student elected to a position in the city government to keep attitudes like Hertzler’s in check.
You actually thought we’d
You actually thought we’d make any progress?
Come on. The ball is entirely in the City’s court. We can beg and beg but nothing’s going to change unless they want it to. We’ll never get there this way.
This is a very insightful
This is a very insightful article and I couldn’t agree with you more. Not all residents agree with the city’s position on the 3 person rule. Unfortunately it is the loudest mouths that prevail and those are the oldies downtown. The students are a huge asset to this community. Matt would have made an excellant city council member. I expect great things from him.