Kingston police are bracing for another night of revelry by Queen's University
students after nearly two dozen arrests were made Friday night.
The university announced in November
that traditional fall homecoming celebrations would be cancelled for at least
two years due to safety concerns. But revellers refuse to give up the partying
that accompanies the festivities and continue to throw unofficial "faux coming"
parties.
Const. Mike Menor says about 23
people were arrested Friday night and early Saturday morning on charges ranging
from assaulting a police officer to public intoxication.
He adds that partiers threw objects
at a prisoner van after arrests were made.
Menor says homecoming weekend is
always taxing on police and Kingston residents, who are fed up with the
resources being poured into the event.
As the football game was underway
Saturday afternoon, police were dealing with people illegally selling alcohol at
keg parties.
Menor says police have also seen a
number of underage drinkers this weekend.
Toronto police on horseback and riot
police have been called in to assist local officers in dealing with the influx
of debauchery.
But he adds that police expect
Saturday night parties to be even more out of control because it is
traditionally the major night for celebrations.
Menor says 11 officers on horseback
helped keep the drunken party goers from flooding into the streets Friday night.
Aberdeen Street, in the heart of the
student neighbourhood, was closed down in previous years to accommodate student
partiers.
Police will work to ensure the street
remains open, but Menor suspects that some partiers will try to shut it down.
Menor says hotel rooms in Kingston
are booked, with revellers come from all over to participate in the event, some
of whom have no connection to the university.
He says he hopes the rainy weather in
Kingston will help deter crowds from gathering on Aberdeen Street.
Last year, an estimated 8,000 people
jammed the street, and officers made nearly 140 arrests.
Twenty-five Queen's students were
charged with illegally selling alcohol at parties last year and police seized
the equivalent of 135 cases of beer.
Hospital emergency rooms overflowed
with grossly intoxicated party goers.
Emergency room doctor James Landine
sent a letter to Queen's and civic leaders warning that "loss of life is
inevitable if this continues."
The university then announced that
the reunion celebrations would be cancelled for a minimum of two years.
Instead the university has started a
"homecoming-styled" spring reunion.
About 200 Queen's students have
joined Facebook groups dedicated to reviving the event, one called "Save Queen's
Homecoming" and the other "Make Queen's Faux coming Safe."