A cheeky problem: NJ town to restrict baggy pants
WAYNE PARRY, AP
WILDWOOD,
N.J. (AP) — Mayor Ernest Troiano Jr. thinks he's found a way to put one
of this Jersey shore resort town's problems behind it. Wildwood is
ready to ban overly saggy pants, no
ifs, ands or butts.
The
city is set to pass a law Wednesday regulating how people dress on its
boardwalk. It bans going shirtless, as well as walking on the boardwalk
with bare feet.
But
the provision that has gained widespread attention is a prohibition on
pants that sag more than 3 inches below the hips, exposing either skin
or underwear. Troiano said Wildwood has
been inundated with complaints from tourists upon whose money the
popular beach town depends for its survival.
"When
you have good families who call you up and say, 'I've been coming here
20 years, 30 years, 40 years and I'm not going to any longer because I'm
not going to subject my children
or my parents or grandparents to seeing some kid walk down the
boardwalk with their butt hanging out,' you have to do something," he
said. "I'm not one of the Fruit of the Loom underwear inspectors; I'm
not one of the grapes. I don't want to see it."
Neither
does Frank Krueger, of Gloucester City, N.J., who has been coming to
Wildwood with his wife, Denise, for decades. Together, they had spent
about $80 on pizza and games of chance
in two hours of strolling the boards.
"You
want a family atmosphere here," he said. "You don't want to see someone
walking around with their butt crack hanging out. On the beach is one
thing, but not here on the boardwalk."
"It's
disgusting," his wife added. "I don't want to see someone's bare butt.
It just looks terrible. They walk around with their legs spread, and
their crotch is down around their knees."
John Peters was not sporting his pants quite that low Monday on the boardwalk. But they were still low enough that half his navy blue briefs were exposed. He had not heard of the proposed
law but said he was unconcerned about it.
"That's not low, compared to some of the others," he said.
Known
popularly as "sagging," the trend originated in the U.S. prison system,
where inmates are not allowed to wear belts. It was popularized by
hip-hop artists and embraced by youths.
The
issue has cropped up — or rather, drooped down — in towns across the
country. Authorities in suburbs of New Orleans, Chicago, Atlanta,
Detroit and Miami and Jacksonville, Fla., are
among those who have passed laws banning overly droopy pants.
The
proposed Wildwood law would set fines of $25 to $100 for a first
offense and $200 for subsequent offenses. Having to do 40 hours of
community service is also a possibility.
Bathing suits are already prohibited for both sexes on the boardwalk, unless covered up by other clothing.
Ruthann
Robson, a City University of New York law professor and author of the
upcoming book "Dressing Constitutionally," says the Wildwood law appears
to be unconstitutional.
"Courts
have struck down attempts to ban saggy pants if what is exposed is
underwear rather than 'private parts,'" she said. "As for municipalities
requiring men to wear shirts, at least
one federal appellate court has said that is 'irrational.'"
The
American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey declined to comment on the
proposed law, but other ACLU chapters elsewhere in the country have
denounced similar bans as unconstitutional.
Troiano
said the city's legal department has reviewed the proposed law and is
confident it will withstand a court challenge, which he conceded will
probably happen at some point. He promised
police won't be out with measuring tapes, relying instead on common
sense when evaluating a person's attire.
"They
say it's a fashion statement and this is America and they have the
right to dress how they want," Troiano said of those who wear their
pants low. "Well, I have the right to decency.
My right is not to have to look at your (rear end) if I don't want to. I
find that offensive. Go somewhere else and do it, and for every one
person I lose, I'll gain 10 more who will be glad."
———
Wayne Parry can be reached at
http://twitter.com/ WayneParryAC
(although
the poet Sir Mixalot made his stand clear on this issue, this does boil
down to the age old battle of the younger generation dressing to offend
the older generation, whether
it’s zoot suits, Mohawks, or “saggy” pants, sure there may be bottoms
nobody wants to see but here in the land of the free, the home of the
outrageous we should be glad the young uns are only showing off their
undies, it could be worse, anybody remember
the fashion madness that was the 70’s? want some advise about how to
make this problem cease? Don’t ban it! Embrace it! Trust me folks after
enough young guns see grannies bloomers it’ll stop being cool and
they’ll stop doing it, and then move onto the next
fad to say “hey look at us!!”)
No comments:
Post a Comment