DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Dana
Wassum and Mary Jane Jackson
brought their bikinis all the
way from Maryland's Towson
University to party and soak up
spring break sun.
So far, they've been
disappointed” I kind of thought
it would be more crazy," the
21-year-old Wassum said. "Like
wet T-shirt contests. We wanted
to enter one but couldn't find
any."
Three years after Daytona Beach
stopped advertising aimed at
pulling in the lucrative but
sometimes rowdy spring break
crowd; the number of students
coming here has dropped from
400,000 to a trickle.
MTV is no longer
welcome to film its spring break
shows in town and most of the
parties that made the city one
of the top national destinations
age gone.
Daytona inherited the spring
break traffic in the 1980s from
Fort Lauderdale, where years of
trashed hotels, fights and fatal
balcony accidents persuaded
officials there to get out of
the college tourism business.
The mayor went on national
television to tell students they
were no longer welcome.
After an advertising push lured
them north, Daytona Beach was
overwhelmed by raucous crowds
and started to crack down on
heavy partying in the 1990s. Bad
behavior peaked again in 2002,
with hoteliers complaining of
heavy drinking and vandalism.
Scores of high school girls were
handcuffed and arrested for
showing their breasts. Others
drank until passing out in the
street.
"What happens inherently is when
you do put controls on events
and you're really clamping down
on some of the excesses like
alcohol consumption, I think the
kids figure, 'Why worry about
going somewhere and being
arrested when I can go to the
Caribbean or somewhere and not
have to worry about those
controls,"' said Tangela Boyd,
spokeswoman for the Daytona
Beach Area Convention and
Visitors Bureau.
Boyd also noted that beachfront
redevelopment is turning several
old, cheaper motels into condos,
further squeezing out
cash-strapped breakers.
Further draining the party pool
are increasingly popular
"alternative spring break"
options, like volunteering on
the hurricane-ravaged
Gulf Coast or
building houses for the
homeless. Spring break trips
abroad, where alcohol
consumption is less restricted
for under-21 partiers, are also
gaining in popularity.
Daytona and Fort Lauderdale
aren't the first cities to
decide the students were more
trouble than they were worth.
After Sonny Bono was elected
mayor of Palm Springs, Calif.,
in 1988, he helped transform the
resort town from a spring break
mecca by banning cruising and
thong bikinis.
As Daytona closes its doors to
college students, they remain
wide open for the increasingly
gentrified crowds that attend
NASCAR races and historically
rowdy events like the motorcycle
rally Bike Week. Both generate
far more in local tourism
dollars than spring break.
According to 2001 estimates,
spring break brought in $196
million, compared with $561
million combined for the Daytona
500 and another race and $744
million for Bike Week and
Biketoberfest.
Daytona Beach still makes top-10
lists of spring break hot spots,
but much larger crowds flock to
Panama City Beach on the
Panhandle, which still hosts an
estimated 350,000 students.
Still more head to South Beach
near Miami, in some circles this
year's most buzzed-about hot
spot.
Several of the sun-kissed,
sandblasted old hotels along
oceanfront Daytona's Atlantic
Avenue still welcome breakers
with marquee messages, and night
clubs trumpeting free drinks
fill up on weeknights. But
without the big crowds and
sponsored tents, and with police
enforcing alcohol bans on the
beach, the city carries a
different air these days.
That was just fine with Reece
Mabry, a 19-year-old student who
came from Murray State in
Kentucky. He was with a group of
Christian guys and didn't plan
to go wild anyway.