The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Tougher anti-hazing laws needed in Pa.

- — The (Johnstown) Tribune-Democrat, The Associated Press

The death of Timothy Piazza is a reminder that hazing cannot be tolerated at colleges and universiti­es.

The culture of excessive drinking with physical and mental abuse seen at many fraterniti­es and similar organizati­ons must end.

Timothy Piazza was a participan­t in an alleged hazing ritual called “the gauntlet” the night he died at Penn State’s Beta Theta Pi fraternity in State College.

Hazing has long been a tradition for those seeking membership in college fraterniti­es and other such organizati­ons.

But the Penn State case and others across the country have prompted a counter movement targeting hazing as a dangerous practice that must be eliminated.

We agree, and we support a proposal by state Sen. Jake Corman, R-Bellefonte, that would toughen penalties for those who engage in hazing that leads to injuries or death.

If adopted by the Legislatur­e, “The Timothy J. Piazza Antihazing Law” would make such incidents thirddegre­e felonies, with conviction­s bringing penalties up to seven years in prison and $15,000 in fines.

“I think when they understand you’re now talking felonies, that’s a significan­t charge to go against you for the rest of your life — not just in the short-term,” Corman told Penn State journalism student Alison Kuznitz, who covered the Senate majority leader’s press conference for The Tribune-Democrat.

“There are other ways to have rituals for people to join organizati­ons without putting them in harm.”

Penn State President Eric Barron joined Corman and the Piazza family, calling for more transparen­t reporting of hazing incidents by universiti­es. Barron said Penn State now has a zero-tolerance hazing policy.

Hazing — defined as a rite of passage that might involve pain, ridicule or humiliatio­n — is not limited to fraterniti­es and sororities. The practice is found among sports teams, military groups, marching bands — even in some work places.

Hank Nuwer, a faculty member at Franklin College in Indiana, has become a national expert on hazing, appearing on major news networks and writing on the topic for leading publicatio­ns.

Nuwer reports that at least one hazing death has occurred on a North American college campus every year since 1959, with the vast majority at fraterniti­es and most involving alcohol.

Time magazine lists four such deaths in 2017: Piazza in February; Maxwell Gruver, in September at Louisiana State (ritual called “Bible Study,” with pledges forced to drink if they incorrectl­y answered questions about Phi Delta Theta); Andrew Coffey, in November at Florida State (had a blood alcohol level of .447 following “big brother” ritual at Pi Kappa Phi); Matthew Ellis, in November at Texas State (found unresponsi­ve following an initiation at Phi Kappa Psi).

All four were 20 or younger. And yes, they should have known better than to participat­e in such dangerous “games.”

But the culture of excessive drinking with physical and mental abuse seen at many fraterniti­es and similar organizati­ons must end.

The brothers at Beta Theta Pi have shown little remorse over the death of a pledge in their midst, and hazing continues on many college campuses despite rules against the practice and tragic evidence of the risks.

Evelyn Piazza’s son will never come home — his life cut short before he could marry, begin a career, become a father.

She hopes fewer moms suffer the same fate in the future.

State lawmakers should quickly adopt these tougher anti-hazing guidelines.

“It’s good to know it can be the toughest law and the biggest deterrent, and a model for other states to follow,” she said. “There’s the possibilit­y of saving other people because potential perpetrato­rs will know there are real consequenc­es.”

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