HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-09-16 - Regular City CouncilCITY OF STEPHENVILLE
CITY COUNCIL MEETING
SEPTEMBER 16, 1997
-h MITCH WILLL4MS, d/b/a THE BULL PEN
1. Introduction of Mitch Williams, d/b/a The Bull Pen. This restaurant will be
operated by Mitch Williams, a retired major league baseball player who now resides in Hico,
Texas. Mr. Williams and his family have contracted to purchase Lot 37 and part of Lot 38
of Block 134, City Addition of Stephenville, Texas, on West Washington Street near the
Montana Restaurant and the Bostock Club. The property in question is currently vacant.
The contract on this property is contingent upon obtaining a B-4 zoning to
operate a sports grill/restaurant known as "The Bull Pen". The restaurant will be seeking a
private club license for presentation of its menu of alcoholic and nonalcoholic beverages to
compliment its menu of hamburgers, gourmet sandwiches and steaks.
The restaurant will be operated by Mr. Williams and his family.
2. Application. An application for a B-4 zoning was filed with the City of
Stephenville on the 25th day of July, 1997.
Applicant desires to seek a change in zoning from B-2 to B-4 and is prepared
to construct the restaurant on this property as soon. as the appropriate site development plan
and permits have been obtained.
Applicant has expended significant time and money in preparation for the
business. Applicant has employed an architect who has designed and drawn the floor plan
and site plan, has employed a printer to print the Mitch Williams' Bull Pen Sports Grill
Menu, has applied for zoning and obtained a staff report from the city staff confirming that
there is sufficient water, sewer, streets and fire protection in this area to accommodate the
plan, has obtained the consent of the owners of this property that they have no objection to
the zoning of this property to B-4, and has determined, as set out in the site plan of this
property that there is sufficient private parking to meet all code requirements of the City of
Stephenville.
In addition, Applicant has agreed to requested changes to the site plan to
accommodate the concerns of the only neighboring property owner to protest the application.
Also, at the suggestion of some citizens, who spoke at the Planning and Zoning Commission
meeting, the Applicant has added items to his menu.
City Council Meeting
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Page I
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3. Mr. Williams and his family propose to construct a new building, which will
house a business as shown by the floor plan. The business will have. more than adequate
parking, as shown by the site plan, including handicapped parking areas. The restaurant will
e outfitted with numerous "big screen" televisions and other sets to provide access to a
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variety of professional and semiprofessional sports events and will provide a comprehensive
menu of food and beverages.
This business will. create several full time and part time jobs and will
contribute substantial sales tax revenue to the City of Stephenville in its operation. In
addition, the business will provide a much needed dining alternative to the "fast food"
establishments in Stephenville.
4. While it is recognized that there is often concern about the proposed zoning
change and while there is diversity of opinion in this city about that, the Applicant would
respectfully point out that this application should be considered on its own merits. The
Applicant will subject himself to and comply with all Federal; state and local laws and
expects that those laws will be enforced, if violated, just as he expects any other person or
business to be treated should there be any violations of the law. Applicant's position is that
this application is complete, that it complies with Federal, state and local laws and that this
would be a business in an area of similar businesses that will contribute greatly to the
economy of Stephenville and is located in the same city block as Montana's and Bostock's.
The Applicant's application is made in conformity to law and Applicant is entitled to equal
protection and due process provisions of the Texas and United States Constitution and
Common Law and respectfully requests that the zoning of Lot 37 and the north 1/2 of Lot 38,
Block 134, City Addition of Stephenville be changed to B-4 from its present B-2 designation.
This property will have more than adequate on -site parking, which will be built in
conformity to the construction of the restaurant so as to provide the circular access to
Washington Street allowing the free movement of traffic in a safe and unobstructed manner.
5. This matter came before the Planning and Zoning Commission on August 26,
1997. The Planning and Zoning Commission decided by a vote of 6-1 to recommend to
the City Council that this property be zoned B-4.
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Evidence Supporting
nDsniai ref' Bw4Zorzing q Re uest
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Reason 1.0
Washington Street
does not meet the
minimum lane width requirements
established by the
Texas Department of Transportation
000 65
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Air Texas Department of Transportation
P. O. BOX 573 • STEPHENVILLE, TEXAS 76401 • (254)965-3511
September 15,1997
Honorable John Pollan
City of Stephenville
298 W. Washington
Stephenville, TX 76401
Dear Mayor Pollan:
The following data is in regard to a request for information related to a zoning issue
before the City Council. The Texas Department of Transportation takes no position on
this issue, but rather discloses these facts as an accommodation from our records.
Washington street has an annual average daily traffic count of approximately 7,300
vehicles. It is currently a three lane section, consisting of a lane in each direction with
eo
a continuous center left turn lane. The width of each lane is approximately 10', for an
overall pavement width of 30 feet. If this roadway was built to current design
k standards, the required criteria would be a minimum of 12' lanes with a 2' curb offset.
MNM:cgb
cc: Mr. Roger Weems
Mr. Mitch Williams
in
Sincerely,
Marc McEndree, P.E.
Area Engineer
00066C
An Equal Opportunity Employer
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DESIGN DIVISION OPERATIONS AND PROCEDURES MANUAL 2-94 3.6 m : 1,2
GEOMETRIC DESIGN CRITERIA FOR URBAN STREETS
FUNCTIONAL
rD"ERABLE
ITEM
CLASS
.
MINIMUM
Design S
All
Up to 100
50
Minimum Horiz. Radius
All
See Figum 4-4
Maximum Gradient 96
All
See Fi 4-14
Stopping Sight Distance m
All
60
Width of Travel Lanes (m)
Arterial
3.6
3.3'
Collector
3.6
3.02
Local
.3-3.6
3.02-'
Curb Parking Lane Width (m)
Arterial
3.6
3.04
Collector
3.0
2.1 s
Local
2.7
2.11
Shoulder Width' (m), Uncurbed New or Completely
Arterial
3.0
1.2
Reconstructed Streets
Collector
2.4
0.9
Local
--
0.6
Width of Refuge Lanes (m)
Art. & Coll.
3.3-3.6
3.0
Local
3.0-3.6
2.7
Offset to Face of Curb m
All
0.6
0.3
Median Width m
All
See Sec. 4-302 1&2
Border Width (m)
Arterial
3.6
2.4
Collector
3.3
2.4
Right -of -Way Width (m)
All
Determined by Local
Conditions
Sidewalk Width (m)
All
1.8-2.47
1.2
On -Street Bicycle Lane Width m
All
--
1.5
Superelevation
All
Yes
None
Clear Zone Width (m)
All
0.9
0.5 from curb
face
Vertical Clearance for New Structures m
All
5.0
5.03
Tuming Radii
See Section 4-710
Structure Widths (m)
Curbed Streets
All
Curb face -to -curb face
plus sidewalk(s)
Uncurbed Streets
All
Approach Roadway
Including Shoulders
Culvert End Offset (m)
All
See Section 4-302(J)
' In highly restricted locations or where few trucks and 60 km/h or less speeds, 3.0 m permissible.
2 In industrial areas 3.6 m usual, and 3.3 m minimum for restricted R.O.W. conditions. In non -industrial areas, 3.0 m minimum.
' In residential areas, 2.7 m minimum.
` Where there is no demand for use as a future through lane, 2.4 m minimum.
s In commercial and industrial areas, 2.4 m minimum.
6 Where only minimum width is provided, it should be fully surfaced. Where desirable width is provided, partial (not less than minimum width)
surfacing or full width surfacing may be provided at the option of the designer.
Applicable for commercial areas, school routes, or other areas with concentrated pedestrian traffic.
Exceptional cases near as practical to 5.0 m but never less than 4.4 m. Existing structures that provide at least 4.3 m may be retained.
Figure 4-26. Refers to Paragraph 4-302
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The bar would be located too close
to Tarleton State University
and the
Tarleton, Child Development Center
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BINGE DRINKING ON AMERICAN
COLLEGE CAMPUSES:
A NEW LOOK AT AN OLD PROBLEM
r
� With Support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
0,00664
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction.................................................................................................................. I
The Prevalence Of Binge Drinking.............................................................................3
StudyDesign................................................................................................................5
The Price The Binger Pays: What Bingers Do To Themselves...................................6
"Secondhand Binge" Effects: What Bingers Do To Others.........................................7
Women, Binging, And "Secondhand Binge" Effects...................................................8
Snapshots: Who Is Binging On Campus In America..................................................9
Drunk Driving: Do Students Still Drink And Drive? ................................
National Trends: Students' Use Of Alcohol
Far Out -Distance Illegal Drug And Tobacco Use......................................................12
What Colleges Can Do: A New Approach To An Old Problem................................13
Appendix....................................................................................................................17
References
Additional Readings
National Resources for More Information
This document is available through the
HARVARD SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
COLLEGE ALCOHOL STUDY
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL BEHAVIOR
677 Huntington Avenue
Boston, Massachusetts 02115
August, 1995
0006K
Binge Drinking in College: A Definitive Study
The Harvard School of Public Health College
Alcohol Study examines the nature, extent, and asso-
ciated problems of heavy episodic or "binge" drink-
ing.* In mounting this research effort, we sought
answers to three core questions:
• How extensive is the problem of binge
drinking among college students?
• Who is affected by binge drinking?
• What can be done about this problem?
A NEW WAY OF LOOKING AT
AN OLD PROBLEM
Our findings show that the issue of heavy drinking
by students can no longer be viewed solely from the
standpoint of the problems binge drinkers cause for
themselves. This study reveals that binging students
are creating serious problems for students who do
not binge drink a phenomenon we are calling
"secondhand binge" effects. These secondhand
effects include physical assault, sexual harassment,
and impaired sleep and study time problems that
threaten the quality and safety of the college experi-
ence for millions of non-binging students.
LEARNING FROM SUCCESSES
The demonstration of "secondhand binge" effects
necessitates a new call to action for college adminis-
trators. To date, most college intervention efforts
have focused on protecting binge drinkers from
themselves. But binge drinkers harm others as well
as themselves, and this impels us to refocus our
efforts toward a concern about the damage binge
drinkers do to others and to campus life.
Two examples from related areas offer reason for
hope. Society's shift in attitude toward driving after
drinking has led to a new range of options to inter-
vene. Today, changes in tavern laws, the abandon-
ment of "happy hour," the practice of using a desig-
nated driver, and stronger drunk driving laws serve
to protect society from the documented impact of
drunk driving on public safety. The anti -smoking
movement in this country is another compelling
example. As a society, we were once tolerant of
other people's cigarette smoking. When we learned
of the health impact of secondhand smoke, we
stopped allowing people to light up in our homes,
workplaces, airplanes, and restaurants. In increasing
numbers of social settings, it is no longer socially
correct to smoke.
* "binge" drinking definition on page 3
.1-9
WHAT DOES THIS MEAN
FOR COLLEGES?
According to a 1989 Carnegie Foundation study,
college presidents nationwide viewed alcohol abuse
as their number one campus life problem. It still is.
Binge drinking is associated with unplanned and
unsafe sexual activity, physical and sexual assault,
unintentional injuries, criminal victimization, inter-
personal problems, physical or cognitive impairment,
poor academic performance, automobile crash
fatalities, and suicide. Colleges also pay significant
costs for property damage, liability, health services,
d security.
an colleges have worked hard at reducing binge
drinking on their campuses. But while there has
been an overall decline in drinking in American soci-
ety as a whole, recent studies have shown no propor-
tionate decline among college students. Nor have
college students exhibited the rates of decline seen in
other young populations. Between 1981 and 1993,
binge drinking by high school seniors dropped by
fourteen percent. Among 19-to-22- year- olds not
attending college, the rate dropped 9°Io. Among col-
lege students, however, the decline in heavy drinking
rings in at a paltry 2.6°Io.
Nearly five of six students in this study drank
during the school year. The universal acceptance
of drinking, and the easy availability of alcohol to
college students regardless of age, is not news, or
use for panic. At most campuses it is not a
l!" ctical goal to eliminate all drinking or reduce the
I portion of students who drink. As a society, and
on the campuses that reflect it, we have to make
clear and consistent distinctions between drinking
and alcohol abuse.
Our concern in the HSPH College Alcohol Study is
alcohol abuse. The crux of alcohol abuse is in the
behavior, not the quantity consumed. When people
do dangerous, offensive, or obnoxious things when
they drink, creating problems for themselves or for
others around them, that's alcohol abuse.
Certainly, not all students who have ever binged have
an alcohol problem; but colleges with large
numbers of binge drinkers do. This study strongly
suggests that colleges create or perpetuate, through
selection, tradition, policy, and other intended and
unintended mechanisms, their own drinking cultures.
In some of those cultures, behavior that would be
considered alcohol abuse in other settings is becom-
ing not just acceptable, but normative.
IF YOU TAKE AWAY ONLY ONE
MESSAGE FROM THIS STUDY
The key to this nation's intervention efforts may lie
in the recognition of secondhand binge effects on
college campuses. In a system with alcohol abuse,
whether a family or a campus, the least effective
intervention point is the abuser. By focusing on
those who pay the price of binge drinking by suffer-
ing its secondhand effects, colleges could mobilize
millions of students nationwide to assert their right
to live free from the injury and harm created by the
binge drinking of their peers.
Henry Wechsler, Ph. D.
Harvard School of Public Health
000664ow
who drink in these or greater amounts differ from were binge drinkers. We classify these schools as
other students by the frequency and severity of their high -binge colleges.
alcohol -related problems.
THE EXTENT OF BINGE DRINKING
RATES OF BINGING VARY WIDELY BY STUDENTS IS ALARMING
FROM SCHOOL TO SCHOOL Full 84% of all students drank during the school year.
Y g Y
Binging rates vary dramatically from campus to cam- Nearly half (44%) of all students were binge drinkers,
pus. At its lowest, the binge drinking rate was 1 % of and 19% were frequent binge drinkers (binged three or
the student population. At its highest, the rate was a more times in the past two weeks). But even these
staggering 70% of students. At nearly one-third of the averages conceal the extent of binge drinking on
schools, more than half of the responding students high -binge campuses.
n,,
�o OF STUDENTS AT HIGH -BINGE COLLEGES* % OF STUDENTS AT LOW -BINGE COLLEGES**
Male Female Total Male Female Total
Frequent bingers 32% 28% 30%
Frequent bingers 11 %
7%
9%
Total bingers 63% 56% 59%
Total bingers 31 %
22%
26%
Non-bingers and 37% 44% 41 %
Non-bingers and 69%
78%
75%
Non-drinkers
Non-drinkers
* More than 50% of students binge
* 35% or fewer students binge
P-1
Quotes used in this report are drawn from student responses to open-ended questions in our survey
00066[
11
THE COLLEGES
A national representative sample of 195 colleges was
selected from the American Council on Education's
list of four-year colleges and universities accredited
by one of the six regional bodies covering the
United States. One hundred forty accredited
four-year colleges participated in the study. These
colleges are located in 40 states and the District of
Columbia. They represent a cross-section of
American higher education. Two-thirds are public,
and one-third are private. Approximately two-thirds
are located in suburban urban settings and one-third
in small town rural settings. Four percent are
women -only colleges, and four percent are histori-
cally black institutions.
z,
THE QUESTIONNAIRE
Our 20-page survey instrument asked students a vari-
ety of questions about their drinking behavior
REG
Nord
Nord
soud-
West
and explored problems they experienced as a result
of their own drinking and the drinking of others.
Most of the measures and questions had been previ-
ously standardized in other national or large scale
studies. Four separate mailings were sent to students
at each college. Responses were voluntary
and anonymous.
THE RESPONSE RATE
A sample of 25,627 students received questionnaires.
A total of 17,592 students responded, for an overall
response rate of 69%. This is considered a good
response rate for mailed questionnaires with college
populations. Comparisons of early and late respon-
ders and a survey of non -responders to the regular
questionnaire were used to rule out possible response
bias. Only statistically significant comparisons are
presented in this report.
DISTRIBUTION OF THE 140 COLLEGES
INCLUDED IN THE STUDY
5
What Bingers Do To Themselves
The numbers in the chart below illustrate the strong,
positive relationship between the frequency of binge
drinking and a variety of alcohol -related health,
social, and academic problems. Nearly half of fre-
quent binge drinkers (47%) experienced five or more
different problems as a result of their own drinking
since the beginning of the school year. In contrast,
14% of binge drinkers and only 3 % of students who
drink but do not binge experienced five or more
drinking -related problems.
Non -binge
Bingers
Frequent
Drinkers
Bingers
Had a hangover
30%
75%
90%
Did something they regretted later
14%
37%
63%
Missed a class
8%
30%
61 %
Forgot where they were or what they did
8%
26%
54%
Got behind in school work
6%
21 %
46%
Argued with friends
8%
22%
42%
Engaged in unplanned sexual activity
8%
20%
41 %
Had unprotected sex
4%
10%
22%
Got hurt or injured
2%
9%
23%
Damaged property
2%
8%
22%
Got into trouble with campus/local police
1 %
4%
11 %
Required treatment for alcohol overdose
< 1 %
< 1 %
1 %
0,0067C
0
7
What Bingers Do To Others
The most troubling findings of this study reveal the
impact of binge drinking on students who do not
binge. We call it "secondhand binge" effects. It is
no longer possible to view binging as solely the
Bingers' problem: non-binging students are paying
too steep a price.
"In a crowded bar l accidentally nudged
someone. 1 apologized, but the guy
hit me anyway with my pitcher of beer,
dousing me with the beer and
making my mouth bleed."
BINGING LEVEL ON CAMPUS
Comparing the prevalence of problems experienced
by students at low-binging and high -hinging schools
brings the issue into sharp focus. On campuses
where more than half the students are binge drinkers,
the vast majority of students (87%) who live on
campus have experienced one or more problems as
a result of others' binge drinking. Even at schools
where binge drinking rates are below 35% of the
student population, 62% of students who live on
campus have been victims of secondhand binge effects.
SECONDHAND BINGE EFFECTS
Percentage of students residing at low -binge and
high -binge colleges who reported the following
alcohol -related experiences:
LOW HIGH
Been insulted or humiliated
21 %
34%
Been confronted with unwanted sexual advances*
15%
26%
Been in a serious argument or quarrel
13%
20%
Been pushed, hit, or assaulted
7%
13%
Had one's studying or sleep interrupted
42%
68%
Had to "baby-sit" a drunken student
31 %
54%
Had one's property damaged
6%
15%
Been a victim of sexual assault or "date rape" *
2%
2%
*Based on women only
BINGE DRINKERS UNDER-
ESTIMATE THEIR BEHAVIOR
Relatively few binge drinkers consider themselves to
be heavy or problem drinkers. Whether they attend a
high -hinging school or a low-binging school, most
binge drinkers compare their drinking to that of their
friends and the people with whom they party.
Women who compare their drinking to men's drink-
ing are especially apt to underestimate their drinking.
Our study found that 91 % of the women who were
frequent binge drinkers, and 78% of the men, con-
sidered themselves to be moderate or light drinkers.
Thus, even the heaviest drinkers on low -binge cam-
puses perceive their drinking to be within acceptable
limits, seriously compromising outreach efforts
targeted at this population.
WOMEN, BINGING, AND
SECONDHAND BINGE EFFECTS
A post -World War II study of college drinking
viewed drinking by women to be such a minor prob-
lem that the researchers defined five different levels
of quantity and frequency for men but only two for
women. Today, while women are still less often
binge drinkers than men, the gender gap has closed,
and the risks to women are even more pronounced.
Their own abuse of alcohol increases their risk of
being victimized by unwanted or unprotected sex.
Female students are also especially at.risk for serious
secondhand binge effects. At high -binge colleges,
26% of women report an unwanted sexual advance,
compared to 15% of women at low -binge campuses.
Q.j
s
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� Who Is Binge Drinking On Campus In America?
FI PERCENT WHO BINGE DRINK
GENDER
Male
Female
AGE
Under 21
2 I -23
24+
I
COLLEGE RESIDENCE
Single sex dorm 38%
Coed dorm
Fraternity or sorority
Off -campus housing
RACE
White
Hispanic
"Other"
Native American/Native Alaskan
Asian/Pacific Islander
B lack/African American
RELIGION
Considers religion to be
very important
Does not consider rellgioll
to be very important
50%
39%
45%
48%
28%
52%
84%
40%
48%
38%
34%
34%
21%
16%
21%
The Il i Ole.st 171I1ge rate �t�(IS jor �� h to males (54%);
the lowest was black/A '-Icail zlII7ericail f males (1 %).
W wnell attell(llllg bt oinell s colleges were less liken' to
binge than Ilonien (It coe(liwational instltutiMIN
(?y% VS. 39(/�, respectll'elv).
00067t.,
CHANGE IN BINGING TRENDS
FROM HIGH SCHOOL TO COLLEGE
Half (50%) of the binge drinkers in the colleges in
this study had already binged when they were
seniors in high school, but campus binging rates also
influence the drinking behavior of students once they
arrive at college.
• At high -binge colleges where more than half of
students are binge drinkers nearly two of five
students who did not binge in high school reported
binge drinking as college students. In contrast, at
low -binge colleges nearly half of students who were
binge drinkers in high school gave up this behavior
as college students.
• Colleges with high binge rates were much more likely
to attract students who were binge drinkers in high
school, compared to low -binge colleges (38%,
compared with 24% of students at low -binge colleges
who previously binged in high school).
BINGING AND FRATERNITIES
AND SORORITIES
Sorority members are nearly twice as likely to be
binge drinkers compared to other female students
(62% vs. 35%, respectively). Among women
who live in sorority houses, an astonishing 80% are
binge drinkers. Similarly, fraternity members binge
more than other male students (75 % vs. 45 %,
respectively), and 86% of fraternity house residents
binge. This raises the question of whether Greek
societies attract or create binge drinkers. Our data
indicate that both dynamics are at work. Sixty per-
cent of those who lived in fraternity houses had been
binge drinkers in high school; and over three -fourths
of fraternity residents who had not binged in high
school became binge drinkers in college.
Conversely, sororities do not seem so much to attract
binge drinkers; one in three women who lived in
sororities had binged in high school, only slightly
higher than the proportion among other students.
But three out of every four women who had not
binged in high school became binge drinkers while
in residence in sororities.
HIGH SCHOOL DRINKING CHANGES IN COLLEGE
High School
College
High -binge 1 38% were bingers......................of these 80% continued binging
g
Schools 62% were non -bin ers...............of these 46% began binging
Low -binge 24% were bingers......................of these 52% continued binging
Schools ' 76% were non-bingers...............of these 17% began binging
10
Do Students Still Drink And Drive?
"Don't drink and drive" and "Friends don't let
friends drive drunk" have yet to become meaningful
slogans among college binge drinkers, despite the
investment of advertising and public education dol-
lars in these messages. In its 1993 report entitled
Substance Abuse: The Nation's Number One Health
Problem, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation doc-
umented that alcohol abuse contributes to nearly half
c�
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70%
a�
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J
of motor vehicle fatalities, the leading cause of death
among young Americans. Our study confirms that
college students remain at high risk: fifty percent of
the frequent binge drinkers in this study reported rid-
ing with a driver who was drunk or high, and 40%
of the males who binged frequently reported that
they had driven a car after having consumed five or
more drinks.
COLLEGE STUDENT DRINKING AND DRIVING
N6V
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O=
30%
33 /o
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i
3: Z
20%
et:
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10%
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a
0%
13%
NON -BINGE DRINKERS BINGED 1 OR 2 TIMES
IN PAST 2 WEEKS
0006741.
I I
Students' Use Of Alcohol.. Far
Out -Distance Illegal Drug And Tobacco Use
Shifts in societal attitudes have played a tremendous
role in reducing the use of illegal drugs and tobacco
products by college students. Often fueled by new
information on the nature and scope of the impact of
substance abuse on others, changing attitudes led to
more effective intervention strategies. These includ-
ed smoke -free workplace policies, taxes that price
cigarettes beyond the means of most teenagers,
and stiffer illegal drug and drunk driving laws.
Spreading information about the prevalence of
secondhand binge effects could mobilize non-bing-
ing students in a groundswell of support to reduce
binge drinking on college campuses.
ALCOHOL AND OTHER DRUG USE
Alcohol 84%
70%
Cigarettes 32%
� 22%°
24%
Marijuana
_ 1 13%
8%
Chewing Tobacco r 5%°
4%
PCP 1
010
4%
LSD P 1
3%
Amphetamines r 1%
3%
Other Opiates
1%
2%
Cocaine
2%
Tranquilizers
1%
Barbituates
Crack
ANNUAL USE
Heroin
USED IN PAST 30 DAYS
Steriods
00/0 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 6000 70% 80% 90%
00067E
1.2
A New Approach To An Old Problem
All colleges are unique; each has its own culture and
traditions, resources and priorities, and relationship
with the community. But every college with a sub-
stantial proportion of binge drinkers must begin with
the question: "Can we accomplish our mission, and
f, I fulfill our students' goals, if we tolerate behavior that
compromises the quality of students' educational and
social lives, as well as their health and safety?" If
that question leads to a commitment to act vigorous-
ly and systemically against campus alcohol abuse,
r multiple approaches tailored to conditions on each
campus will certainly be needed.
UNDERSTANDING THE PROBLEM
Everyone, from the college president down, is sus-
ceptible to denial about the extent of the alcohol
abuse problem and its impact on the life of the cam-
pus. To begin to assess the extent of the problem on
a campus, consider a weekend tour, beginning on
Thursday night. Take a drive around the campus
with the security guards; observe the clubs on its
outskirts. Drop in on the health service. On Friday,
see how many classes are offered, and how many
students attend. Observe the fraternity houses and
dorm's late at night; station yourself outside the resi-
dence halls and sorority houses Sunday morning and
witness the "walk of shame," a phrase students use
to describe women returning from a night of
unplanned, and often unprotected, sex. Above all,
fight the temptation to think of the alcohol abuse
you see as merely the problem of "troubled"
individuals. When the faces change but the numbers
do not, something much more powerful and institu-
tional is happening.
A SYSTEMATIC EFFORT
BEGINS WITH THE PRESIDENT
Commitment and leadership at the top is vital to
assure that consistent, long-term prevention and
intervention strategies are reflected not just in
speeches but in budgets. Over the years, many
administrations have opted to keep a low profile on
prevention efforts. Denial, a sense of futility, and
13
000676
Wei
lack of resources may be at play, but there are other
reasons as well. Some administrators fear that a
more visible, university -wide stance might create
the appearance that alcohol abuse is unusually severe
at their school, rather than that the school chooses
to mount a realistic, systemic response to a common
problem other colleges prefer to sweep under the
rug. Some administrators may be advised by their
legal institution's counsel to do as little as possible
that might suggest knowledge of an alcohol problem
on campus and acceptance of any responsibility for
the environment that encourages or discourages it.
But the prevalence of binge drinking on campus is
no secret, and it is difficult to see how a college
administrator could successfully claim not to know
it exists.
EXPECT EVERYONE TO PLAY AN
IMPORTANT ROLE
Colleges and universities offer our most formidable
aggregations of specialists in human and organiza-
tional behavior, including psychologists, sociologists
and anthropologists, linguists and lawyers, teachers
and marketing strategists, experts in health and
addictions, policy analysts and security specialists,
community organizers, family therapists, and system
analysts. Yet it is the rare institution that convenes a
working group of appropriately diverse problem -
solvers to address the alcohol abuse in its midst.
These faculty members can be asked to play a
limited but meaningful role in planning and
assessment, supporting students and administrators
in a campus -wide effort. Athletic directors and
� coaches can have enormous influence on the drink-
ing culture of a campus, but they are rarely pressed
to use it. The very visible example set by athletes,
the drinking policy at games, the money showered
on campus by the beer industry these are forces
that make some student affairs directors feel they are
bailing water with a spoon.
Resident advisors (RAs), and academic and retention
counselors have been underutilized. They could
enhance both prevention and early intervention
efforts, but they each need clear roles. RAs cannot
be expected to be both monitors and confidants.
They need much better sustained training and super-
vision than they typically receive, and better support,
including the sure protection of explicit policy.
Security officers could also benefit from dedicated
training and regular consultation around alcohol -
related issues and infractions. It's easy for them to
lapse into feeling like they are hurting rather than
helping students whose abusive drinking they call to
authorities' attention. Students themselves must
carry much of the responsibility for campus change.
Student government, peer educators, and campus
media can all agree that students are in favor of
good times but not in favor of drunkenness.
CHANGE EXPECTATIONS OF
INCOMING FRESHMEN BEFORE
THEY ARRIVE ON CAMPUS
Half of college bingers began binging in high school
or earlier. Many colleges (large state universities
and elite institutions, for example) may be in a
position to encourage high schools to strengthen
their health education programs. Colleges also need
to examine the expectations they are planting, or fail-
14
' ing to plant, in applicants and entering students.
Their promotional material should reflect not just the
educational and athletic achievements of the school,
but the quality of student life, including the measures
they are willing to take to safeguard it. Recruiters
can be trained to describe an institution where there
are a great many ways to have a good time, and
where drunken behavior is decidedly unwelcome.
By discouraging applicants who intend to major in
binge drinking, the institution can be expected even-
tually to improve its drinking culture, probably
upgrade its academic standing, and save some of the
costs associated with alcohol abuse.
At some campuses, freshman orientation is some-
E
thing between a lost opportunity and a week-long
drunk. When they first arrive on campus, usually
before other students, many freshmen will respond
positively to initiatives they will later spurn, particu-
larly if they represent an opportunity to meet their
classmates under relatively natural conditions.
First -year women need special attention. Many
have had little experience with alcohol abuse in
high school, and need to understand that because
of differences in metabolism women cannot drink
equally with men. It only takes four drinks for a
woman to begin having the same alcohol -related
problems as a man who has five drinks. And their
risk of sexual assault, unwanted pregnancy, and
exposure to HIV and other sexually transmitted
diseases is dramatically increased by their own
alcohol abuse and by that of their companions.
i�
CHALLENGE THE GREEKS
Many fraternities and sororities are functional
saloons. Fully 86% of men and 80% of women who
live in fraternities and sororities are binge drinkers.
The rare president or dean who tells the Greeks to
"shape up or ship out," and then keeps his or her
word, earns the respect of many. The national orga-
nizations must be held accountable for serving
underage students in their frat houses and providing
an environment where binge drinking is the norm.
CAMPUS AND COMMUNITY
MUST COOPERATE
Town/gown relationships are important for both par-
ties. State and local officials need to enforce under-
age drinking laws and strengthen others to help limit
supply. Even more important are the bars and clubs
that encourage drunkenness through promotion of
discount drinks and contests. Presently, these clubs
often form the nucleus of the advertising account for
campus newspapers. Colleges will have to confront
their own power to influence the way these clubs
operate and are regulated; they are far from helpless
or ignorant in these matters. If they want to target
heavy drinking, drunkenness, and in particular the
antisocial behaviors this form of drinking causes,
campus security and town police should be on the
same team, working together. In return, colleges can
help local law enforcement agencies through more
consistent disciplinary policies for students whose
drunken behavior violates the law.
00067cl-
15
MOST OF ALL, EMPOWER
STUDENTS TO TAKE THE LEAD
A successful and sustainable campus -wide effort
depends on the extent to which students are seen as
the leaders and impetus of their own self -generated
code of respectful community behavior, or only the
targets of it. Process is not just important, but cru-
cial. It requires patience, persistence, and humility
to enable students to take the lead in making drunk-
enness an unacceptable excuse for violent and dis-
ruptive behavior that violates other students' rights.
But a set of policies and exhortations from above
will simply not suffice. Students bothered by the
secondhand binge effects of hinging students will
rl
r � gradually feel empowered to speak up without
feeling humiliated themselves. It will be the
students standing at their sides, more than the
administrators standing behind them, who most
contribute to that feeling.
Whatever alcohol policies are developed by and
for students must be brief and comprehensible
enough to be effectively publicized, and must be
vigorously enforced. It's better to have a few
well -specified rules, with teeth, about the critical
issues (such as how students behave), than many
intricate rules which students do not read and
know will not be enforced.
If colleges really aspire to be civil communities,
prevention efforts must empower those students
adversely affected by the binge drinking of others.
T
We once thought drunk drivers were part of life, and
smokers had to be tolerated. Today people feel
comfortable speaking out against drunk drivers and
smokers because we now know the harm they cause
others is not an acceptable price to pay for their
behavior. These same lessons can help lend a voice
to students affected by the secondhand binge prob-
lems of other students' drinking.
00068C
16
it APPENDIX
REFERENCES
Straus R, Bacon SD. Drinking in college. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1953.
Wechsler H, McFadden M. Drinking among college students in New England. J Stud Alcohol 1979;40:969-996.
Wechsler H, Isaac N. "Binge" drinkers at Massachusetts colleges: Prevalence, drinking styles, time trends, and
associated problems. JAMA 1992;267:2929-2931.
Presley CA, Meilman PW, Lyerla R. Alcohol and drugs on American college campuses: Use, consequences, and
perceptions of the campus environment, Volume I: 1989-1991. Carbondale, Ill.: The Core Institute, 1993.
Johnston LD, O'Malley PM, Bachman JG. National survey results on drug use from the monitoring the future
study, 1975-1993. Volume II: College Students and Young Adults. NIH Publication No. 94-3810, Washington,
DC. Government Printing Office, 1994.
Wechsler H, Davenport A, Dowdall G, Moeykens B, Castillo S. Health and behavioral consequences of binge
drinking in college: A national survey of students at 140 campuses. JAMA 1994; 272:1672-1677.
Wechsler H, Dowdall G, Davenport A, Castillo S. Correlates of college student binge drinking. Am J Public
Health, JULY 1995; 85 : 921-926.
Wechsler H, Dowdall G, Davenport A, Rimm EB. A gender -specific measure of binge drinking among college
students. Am J Public Health, JULY 1995; 85: 982-985.
Wechsler H, Moeykens B, Davenport A, Castillo S, Hansen J. The adverse impact of heavy episodic drinkers on
other college students. J Stud Alcohol (in press).
ADDITIONAL READINGS
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Substance Abuse: The Nation's Number One Health Problem. Princeton,
N.J.: the Foundation.
Secretary of Health and Human Services. Eighth Special Report to the U.S. Congress on Alcohol and Health.
West Washington, D.C.: National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.
ri'"NATIONAL RESOURCES FOR MORE INFORMATION
Higher Education Center for Alcohol and Other Drug Prevention
1-800-676-1730 (outside Maryland)
1-301-492-5336 (in Maryland)
Center for Substance Abuse Prevention (CSAP).
National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information
1-800-729-6686.
't
f
17
bingedrinking.htm at www.collegenews.com Page 1 of 1
Students Still Binge Drinkers
P
College Press Service
Washington - Heavy drinking is down in America, except for one notable place:
college campuses. That's according to a report from the National Institute on
Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism which calls binge drinking a "widespread
problem" on college campuses despite a decline in alcohol use among the
general population.
Continue? Scroll Down...
Index of Articles
College News Home
In 1994, 40 percent of college students reported binge drinking at least once within the
previous two weeks of being surveyed, according to the triennial report. The N IAAA
defines "binge drinking" as consuming five or more drinks at one sitting. Gender seems to
play a significant role in terms of binge drinking, with 52 percent of college men reporting
such drinking as compared to 31 percent of women. Across the board, nearly 70 percent of
college students said they drank alcohol at least once a month and about 4 percent said
they drank daily, the study found. The report calls the findings for college students "quite
high" in light of a decline in drinking among high school seniors. The authors suggest that
college students, who report drinking less in high school than non -college bound seniors,
may be "catching up" and possibly surpassing theirs not in college. The N IAAA, which has
compiled previous studies on alcohol consumption, blames campuses for promoting a
"Culture of drinking" and praises alternatives such as alcohol -free parties. Among the
general population, alcohol use hit a 30 year low in 1993, after peaking during the 1980s.
Increased health concerns, less tolerant attitudes toward drinking, and stricter laws against
drinking and driving are possible reasons for the change, the N IAAA said.
More information on the NIAAA's "Ninth Special Report to the U.S. Congress on Alcohol
and Health" is available at the agency's website: http://www.niaaa.hih.gov
Index of Articles
College News .Home
Last Updated August 221:12 pm CST
by Cris Brannen
k
College Academic Performance and Alcohol and ... Page 3 of 3
✓ ✓ v11LL,/Vl AJ Vi VV�
Harvard School of Public Health, 1995. 1 5 5-1060
e�vton, Massachusetts 021
3. Abbey A. Acquaintance Rape and Alcohol Consumption
ttp://www.edc.org/hec/
on College Campuses: How Are The Linked? Journal of 800-676-173 0
g p y h Ctr ed
g c.or
American College Health 1991. 39: 165-169. erE d
4. Eigen LD. Alcohol Practices, Policies, and Potentials of American Colleges and Universities: An
OSAP white Paper. Rockville, MD: Office for Substance Abuse Prevention, U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services, 1991.
This publication was produced with funding from the U.S. Department of Education under contract
number SS95013001 with Education Development Center, Inc. Views expressed are those of the
contractor. No official support or endorsement by the U.S. Department of Education is intended or
should be inferred. Published 1997
z +Higher Ed Center FCT2
000681%W
College Academic Performance and Alcohol and ... Page 1 of 3
T.vs.v,cnxrt.•,-�
_. 101MCFACTS
The Higher Education Center for Alcohol and Other Drug Prevention
College Academic Performance
and Alcohol and Other Drug Use
Several recent national studies have documented high rates of drinking on college campuses and a
wide range of negative repercussions of student alcohol use. 112 Associated with fighting, vandalism,
acquaintance rape, and unprotected sex, drinking on college campuses has a clear and damaging
effect on campus life.1,213
Difficulty meeting academic responsibilities is one of the most common consequences of alcohol use.
In addition to well -documented consequences such as poor performance on assignments and missed
classes, anecdotal evidence suggests that many students who drop out of colleges and universities
have alcohol and other drug problems.4
A national survey of nearly 3 7, 000 students at 66 four-year colleges and universities found that
students with an A average consume a little more than three drinks per week, B students have almost
five drinks per week, C students average more than six drinks per week, and students getting Ds or Fs
consume nine drinks per week. l
A companion survey of 5,000 students from 11 two-year colleges found a similar trend in the
association between alcohol and poor academic performance as seen with four-year institutions.
Two-year college students with an A average have about two -and -a -half drinks per week, B students
average three -and -a -half drinks per week, C students consume about five drinks per week, and
students earning Ds or Fs have a little less than six drinks per week.1
In the same national surveys of four-year and two-year colleges, 20 percent of all students reported
that they had done poorly on a test or assignment, and nearly 30 percent said they had missed class
because of their alcohol or other drug use in the previous 12 months. I
A national study of binge drinking (defined as five or more drinks in a row for men and four or more
for women in the previous two weeks), which surveyed nearly 18,000 students, found that 21 percent
of students who binge drank had fallen behind in their schoolwork and 30 percent had missed class
because of their drinking since the beginning of the school year. Among frequent bingersstudents who
had binged three or more times in the previous two weeks46 percent had fallen behind in school and
over 60 percent had missed class because of their drinking. Only a fraction of nonbinge drinkers fell
1 behind in their studies or missed class because of drinking (6 percent and 8 percent, respectively).2
Average Number of Drinks Per Week by GPA
College Academic Performance and Alcohol and ...
Page 2 of 3
Source: Core Institute, 19961
121
9.0
1
M
10 ` _
I
6.1`
I
81 4.8
wo
1 3.3
6
41
21
1
01
A B C D or F
Grade point average (GPA)
An estimated one-third of American colleges can be classified as "high -binge" schools, where more
than half the student body are binge drinkers. At high -binge colleges, nine out of ten students living
on campus have suffered some ill effect, such as fights, assaults, and property damage, because of
others' drinking, and nearly 70 percent have had their studying or sleep interrupted.2
;cent studies have only begun to document the relationship between academic
rformance and alcohol and other drug use on American campuses. Anecdotal
idence points to a number of research questions needing further examination
that we can understand the full impact of alcohol and other drug abuse on
idents, colleges, and society. Future studies should examine:
What proportion of academic warnings and probations can be attributed to
lcohol and other drug abuse?
What proportion of entering students each year end up dropping out due to
Icohol or other drug abuse?
What price is paid in terms of lost wages and job opportunities by students
tho never complete their college degrees?
What burden do these dropouts place on society as a result of their lost
roductivity in the workplace?
References
1. Presley CA, Meilman PW, Cashin M Lyerla R. Alcohol
and Drugs on American College Campuses: Use,
Consequences, and Perceptions of the Campus Environment,
Volume III, 1991-1993 . Carbondale, IL: Core Institute, 1996
2. Wechsler H. Binge Drinking on American College
Campuses: A New Look at an Old Problem. Boston:
The Higher Education Center for
Alcohol and Other Drug Prevention
Education Development Center, Inc.
0
0
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