movieguy Posted May 20, 2005 Report Posted May 20, 2005 Turns out tailgate drinking is illegal before baseball games in Milwaukee Arnie Stapleton Canadian Press Friday, May 20, 2005 MILWAUKEE (AP) - Millions of baseball fans have chugged Milwaukee's finest suds while grilling burgers and brats before Brewers games over the last quarter century - and it turns out every one of them was imbibing illegally. A city ordinance passed in 1980 - and which city officials are about to override - says it's unlawful for anyone to drink alcoholic beverages in public parking lots or public structures. That would include the parking lots around Miller Park, which was built on the site of the old County Stadium instead of downtown in part because the team wanted to maintain the tailgating tradition. It's as much a part of the Brewers as the secret stadium sauce, giant racing sausages and their lederhosen-clad mascot, Bernie Brewer, who used to slide into a giant beer mug at the old ballpark. The drinking tailgaters, many of whom wanted to get a buzz before the game to avoid the higher costs of ballpark concessions, were all breaking the law. Who knew? Almost nobody. That is, until Milwaukee police took over security duty at the ballpark this season from the Milwaukee County Sheriff's Department - which isn't in the business of enforcing city ordinances. Alderman Michael Murphy, who represents the Miller Park area, said a vigilant police sergeant told him he'd have to ticket tailgaters between $50 and $250 US for drinking alcoholic beverages outside the ballpark. "This guy was a law-order police sergeant who was just doing his job," Murphy said. But Murphy didn't want fans being taken for felons just for sampling some of Brew City's best beverages, so he called assistant city attorney Bruce Schrimpf, who agreed there was a quandary. So, Murphy introduced legislation that allows tailgate drinking this season as a "special event" under the city's ordinance while he worked out a proposal to make the exemption permanent. "We didn't want a bunch of lawbreakers on our hands, although we could have made a lot of money," Murphy said. "I tried to make it illegal to drink Budweiser," while keeping locally brewed Miller products free of fines, Murphy joked. The city's Common Council is scheduled to vote on the permanent exemption Friday, and it's not expected to receive any opposition. "You're talking about Milwaukee here," Murphy said with a laugh. © The Canadian Press 2005 links
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