The Daily Athenæum of West Virginia University is hewing close to its motto ("Little good is acomplished without controversy, and no civic evil is ever defeated without publicity") in reporting on the rapid encroachment of university housing authorities onto the traditionally greek prerogative of property ownership. That is, WVU is gobbling up houses and then reletting them to fraternities, with more onerous restrictions attached. A lively debate has reportedly sprung up on the wisdom of this path.
Apologists for the university—and there are many—point to the squalid state of many pre-takeover properties, the financial uncertainty associated with a transitory organization such as a fraternity maintaining an expensive investment, and the sensible nature of the new regulations imposed on university-let housing. In this camp is Sigma Alpha Epsilon, whose president deems them "lucky to be in the house, so we follow rules closely," and professes openly to be the university's lapdog ("We are the pet project"). Beta Theta Pi, Pi Kappa Phi, Phi Gamma Delta and Sigma Alpha Mu have also come under university ownership in the last year.
Meanwhile, Theta Chi continues to operate outside of institutional oversight, with mixed results. “University-owned or leased fraternities has its pros and cons. It would be good, give us some security. We want to know that Theta Chi will be here next year.” He also averred that the house was not "up to code," an odd admission to a publicly-digested journal. Yet they are spared the constant "spot checks" by WVU police that Sigma Alpha Epsilon tries to put a cheery face on.
The otherwise interesting subject matter is hampered by the execrable rhtetoric of author Marli Riggs, who evidently feels transitional adverbs and segues are the work of the devil. Contradictions and incoherence abound. Consider the following, for example, and try to determine whether rules for fraternities compared to residence halls are (a) the exact same, (b) a little bit more flexible, (c) ultimately subject to new rules:
The rules and regulations of the owned or leased fraternity houses on campus follow the exact same rules as the resident halls, said Mayor Ron Justice, director of student organizations.
“Fraternities are a little bit more flexible,” he said. “No new rules are taking place soon.”
In any case, WVU's intitiative is hardly unprecedented; many if not most universities own a good portion of greek houses on their campus. But seeing the transition offers a valuable window into the benefits and losses.
WVU Daily Athenæum