EXCLUSIVE: Leaked Documents Show University Of Tennessee Plans Major Overhaul Of Greek Parties
Back in the early months of 2015, I covered an interesting story about the battle between University Of Tennessee administrators and the Greek system. The gist of the story was this: A loophole in an existing rule allowed UTPD to pin the blame on a chapter for drinking incidents off campus at, say, an apartment or a house. It was some serious abuse of power.
Thanks to a few anonymous tipsters, we now know that campus administrators are planning on expanding on that power. The administrators are looking to effectively end all off-campus parties held by Greek organizations, even something as little as a get-together between a few members. The new policies do not specifically say that off-campus parties are now banned. Instead, administrators are making them economically impossible to hold.
Under the compliance section of the new Sorority and Fraternity Event Notification Form, the first rule states that “alcohol must be provided by a third party vendor.” That means that instead of buying kegs, cases, bottles of liquor, mixers, etc., Greek organizations will now have to bring in an alcohol distributor who will sell alcohol at the event. Third party vendors are not cheap. I know this from firsthand experience being a social chair.
In the “suggested practices” section, there is a checklist of items that are required for every event when you register your party. These items include: hiring a security guard, carding at the door, applying wristbands to distinguish age, providing non-alcoholic beverages, having a sober monitor for every 10-15 guests, having a guest sign-in sheet which may be given to the university, and provide non-salty foods. Some of these items I understand. The ones that baffle me are the “provide non-salty foods,” and the needing one sober monitor for every ten guests. The rest are just typical cover-your-ass procedures. However, hiring a security guard, buying wristbands, and buying food all add up in cost in addition to the third party vendor costs.
I’ve been told that another option is for organizations is to rent out a bar for their parties. The cost of that can run $500 on a weekday, and $1,000 on a weekend. The kicker, from what I’ve heard, is that bars typically require you to get a band if you rent out the bar. If that is true, your event can get pretty expensive depending on who you get.
Finally, the rules under the “What Constitutes a Chapter Event” section are extremely vague. In short, if a few fraternity members buy a keg and invite a few friends over, this could now be considered a chapter event. There is a chance that the university will take advantage of this vague description because, if an organization does not inform the university of an event, they could get hit with violations.
Here are the documents that were sent to us via the anonymous tipsters:
The Basics of Social Event Planning
Sorority and Fraternity Event Notification Form (Draft)
Dark times are looming on the Rocky Top. Stay the course, and fight the good fight, Vols..
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If your chapter has insurance (and it does) then the whole “double wristband” and “non-salty foods” shit is straight out of the insurance policy. If you look up the Risk Management Manual from FIPG, it’s all in there.
11 years ago at 1:22 pmThis are the same rules we adhere to at Illinois. It really is a non-issue.
11 years ago at 1:45 pmThere are people talking about the end of fraternities within the coming decades. And I do concede that schools everywhere deciding to stick their dicks in a tradition that has stood for more than a century will force change. But the need for fraternity will never die. When my founding fathers started their organization, it was cheaper to split the cost of a house between them than all pay for any other housing. There was no IFC, no nationals, no rules about how they could have parties. Today, greeks live in multi million dollar mansions on prime spots on campus and have ties to people you’ll never meet in schools across the country. And it costs me more to live in our chapter house than it would to be a geed in a dorm. It’s nice but it’s all kind of superfluous. When you cut right down to the core of a fraternity, it is the brothers. No more, no less. I see the future of fraternity life being a movement back to its origins. These massive national organizations seem too bloated with shitty chapters. We will probably see the fall of many of the chapters we are now brothers of, but there will be nothing to stop fraternity men of the future from getting a house just off campus and making of it whatever the fuck they want. The decline of the university sanctioned greek system we know will leave room for local fraternities to form and fall with all the freedom in the world.
TL;DR: Bring back the forums, fire steve holt.
11 years ago at 1:52 pmControversial opinion here so I’ll accept the laps, but I think we’ve lost the fight. There is just way too much momentum going against us right now to stop it anytime soon. I honestly think what’s going to happen is that our respective organizations are going to be brought to their knees on campuses throughout the country and won’t be able to exist more than a couple decades from now. The only real solution I can see is staying true to our letters as long as possible until they become so warped by the PC police that we don’t recognize them. Once that happens the next move is to go underground; establish our own fraternities outside of where any form of authority can touch them. I see a lot of dark times coming up, and it’s only going to get worse.
TL;DR- we’ve pretty much lost the battle, and winning the war is going to involve a lot of sacrifice all around.
11 years ago at 1:56 pmI disagree, partially. And skipping to the end, losing the war isn’t the end. If your national organization shut down today, what your chapter do? “I guess we’re not friends anymore. Cya.” Probably not. Yes, tragically disheartening, but I guarantee your ritual mentions a bond somewhere. It’ll just be up to individuals within individual chapters to live on under their own. No one can extinguish our right to free assembly. So we’ll just be doing the same shit without nationals or administration. But we’ll be held personally responsible for everything. Spreading of which, personal responsibility would solve everyone’s fucking problems if they’d get their heads out each other’s asses. TL;DR No one can break our bonds or take our rights. Can we get the damn forums back for shit like this?
11 years ago at 3:45 pmFucking liberals.
11 years ago at 2:09 pmI think it’s time some of the prominent Greek alumni start influencing the administration with their funding and protecting the way of life from which they came
11 years ago at 2:19 pmTime for all Greek Alumni, prominent or not, to let their alma mater know that they will give NO MONEY to the institution if continued suppression of Greek organizations occurs. When you get the first letter soliciting gifts, reply with a no-nonsense reply stating your position. Contact the Alumni Relations folks at the University and let them know your position. Money, or the lack thereof, talks.
11 years ago at 7:58 pmTotal Snowden Move
11 years ago at 2:40 pmCan anyone imagine this shit in the 70’s or 80’s? These articles seem to be reproducing at extraordinary rates as if there is a carbon copy formula for ending Greek life for future generations
11 years ago at 3:08 pmSounds like our school
11 years ago at 3:21 pmFraternities will soon be legends and memories.
11 years ago at 3:27 pm