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UPDATE: Ocean City Introduces Ordinances Addressing Rowdy Teens; New Info Added

Ocean City Council introduces ordinances aimed at curbing rowdy teen behavior during a special meeting June 1.
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Ocean City Council introduces ordinances aimed at curbing rowdy teen behavior during a special meeting June 1.

By Vince Conti

OCEAN CITY – Over Memorial Day weekend, Ocean City police responded to 999 calls for service due mainly to large groups of teens gathered on the city’s beaches and engaged in illegal activities. 
Mayor Jay Gillian reported that teens were participating in underage drinking, vandalism, assaults, and shoplifting. He even added that police were called to confiscate an illegal firearm.
It was enough to warrant a call for a special meeting of Ocean City Council at 1 p.m. June 1 to introduce a new set of measures aimed at curtailing the disruptive and dangerous behavior of the youth groups. 
The measures taken together change the nature of summer at the shore, but the mayor and the governing body feel they are the necessary response to outright lawlessness. 

The Ordinances

Two ordinances were introduced at the special meeting.
One moves an already existing curfew for those under 18 from 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. The ordinance contains a list of what Solicitor Dottie McCrosson termed “common sense exceptions,” including teens going to or returning from work, attendance at school or religious events, and juveniles accompanied by a parent or guardian.
Enforcement of the curfew starts with two curbside warnings followed by a possible stationhouse adjustment where the juveniles are taken into custody and parents or guardians must pick them up at the station. No charges will be filed. The parent or guardian may be liable for fines if convicted in municipal court.
A second ordinance was introduced to ban backpacks on beaches, boardwalks, and beach street ends from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. and from May 15 to Sept. 15. This ban on backpacks applies to all individuals, not just juveniles. 
McCrosson emphasized that police would use common sense enforcement but would not engage in profiling or selective enforcement targeting only juveniles. Exceptions are again listed in the ordinance.
Penalties for violation include fines for adults and a similar process of escalating law enforcement responses for juveniles as are in the previous ordinance on curfews.
Ocean City already designated several unwelcome behaviors as breaches of the peace in order to provide yet another tool for law enforcement confronted with responding to the juvenile problem.
In addition, Gillian has used his authority to close beaches at 8 p.m. and beach area restrooms at 10 p.m. 

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