* The setup…
Charles Reeves’ pants fall past his hips, even with a belt. He wraps a rubber band around the cuffs so the hem of his jeans won’t scrape the ground. The 18-year-old Danville High School student layers his jeans over a pair of basketball shorts.
“It’s not as comfortable on my waist,” Reeves said of the style that he, like so many students, sports around campus.
This baggy style, however, is one that Ward 1 Alderman Tommie Reed wants to see banned under a citywide ordinance.
“I know it’s a fad … but it’s gone too far,” Reed said.
Over the past few months, Reed has repeatedly asked city council members to consider his suggestion. He called the popular style “indecent,” saying that people shouldn’t be allowed to show their underclothes.
* Apparently, this idea is all the rage in Louisiana…
Hike up those pants. Droopy drawers that bare skin or underwear might soon be forbidden fashion on the streets of several cities, and violators could be forced to part with some cash.
“I’m tired (of) looking at behinds,” Shreveport, Louisiana, Councilwoman Joyce Bowman said after Tuesday’s 4-3 vote to ban fanny-flaunting trousers.
Nobody can be arrested just for violating the ordinance, but they could be fined or required to perform community service. The maximum fine for a first offense is $100.
The city council in another Louisiana city, Alexandria, voted unanimously Tuesday to ban the baring. Its ordinance allows some sag, but 3 inches or more can bring a fine of $25 to $200 and a requirement for community service.
If the mayors of Shreveport and Alexandria sign the ordinances, they will bring Louisiana’s total to at least six, with at least two more cities considering bans.
Question: Do you think the government - any government - should have the right to tell people how to wear their pants in public?
Have a little fun with this one. It’s Friday, after all. Maybe you can suggest other ordinances for Ald. Reed.