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Irish in Isla Vista

Maligned Summer Visitors “Just Older Versions of Our Freshman Selves”?


Tuesday, July 1, 2008
By Nicki Arnold
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The flavor of Isla Vista is a bit different this time of year. It tastes distinctly less like Jack Daniel’s and Sierra Nevada, and a little more like Bailey’s and Guinness.

Yes, the Irish are here again. I.V. wears a different hat in the summer, and this year it’s especially green. When Santa Barbara City College and UCSB students head home for the summer, their empty apartments are filled by summer subleasers. This summer, it seems more Irish visitors than ever are calling I.V. home.

Nicki Arnold
Click to enlarge photo

Paul Wellman

Nicki Arnold

By and large, the perception of many more long-term I.V. residents of their Irish guests seems less than positive. When I asked my friends about their opinion, they told tales that associated these temporary I.V. residents with everything from bad behavior to full-fledged crime. One friend blamed missing iPods on the random Irish people who showed up to a house party. Another friend claimed he knew someone who was raped by an Irish person last summer, and yet another friend scoffs every time her Irish neighbors walk by. So when I sat down with my own Irish neighbors — six girls in all — for an interview, you can understand my shock when they gushed about how warm all the American students had been to them.

“Californians are so friendly,” said Gill. “If we go back [to Ireland] and be this friendly, people will think we’re being fake.” Her friends let out big, hearty laughs and agreed. When I asked them what they were doing here, they explained that nearly all Irish college students do it. They’re enrolled in a J1 program, which allows college students to get temporary Social Security numbers and Exchange Visitor visas to live and work in the United States four months. They can pick from destinations all over the U.S., but California has by far the most choices. The J1 program allows these Irish students to immerse themselves in American culture. The girls laughed when they sarcastically said they came here to “experience diversity.” They admit freely that they’re here on essentially a three-month vacation. They’ve lived with their parents in Dublin forever — even while they’ve been at college — and were anxious to get away.

“Freedom is our reason for being here,” said Jane. “And the sun.” Because most of them were jobless when they first arrived, they had nothing to do but party and work on their tans. (They were sorely disappointed when I told them they weren’t the dark-skinned beauties they thought they were.) “This is the first time we’ve been sober all day since we’ve been here,” Gill said proudly. “You have to put that in there.” An hour later, a friend came by with a joint, and they became decidedly less sober.

Their “no responsibilities” lifestyle irked me when they moved into the apartment across from me on June 2, a week before finals. An Irish party doesn’t exactly make for soothing background music when I’m trying to write about Martin Luther’s 95 Theses.

I.V. landlords don’t always call the Irish their favorite people, either. In 2005, a group of Irish students completely destroyed an apartment and left behind thousands of dollars worth of damage costs. (The Independent wrote a story on the matter too, and raised a few eyebrows with readers who accused the article of endorsing some antiquated stereotypes that plagued Irish-Americans generations ago.) Meridian Group — formerly known as BDC management — said in 2005 they would no longer rent to Irish students. A friend who currently rents from Meridian said he was specifically told not to sublet to Irish students in the summer. The police have also been cracking down on the Irish visitors. I.V. Foot Patrol Lieutenant Brian Olmstead said that, since June 1, 40 Irish visitors have been either arrested or issued citations for mostly alcohol-related offenses. Olmstead said that this number accounts for over half of the arrests for the last month.

So some of the Irish have wreaked some havoc here, to say the least. A few have left apartments in total shambles; a few of the girls have surely been promiscuous; a few of the guys have been more than grabby. Nobody is denying that a lot these Irish students love a crazy party. But is it really fair for me to hate on all of them because of a few awful seeds? Would it really be fair to say that all Isla Vistans love to host triple-keggers and ruin apartments just because some people on Del Playa Drive do so?

When I sat down and talked to the Irish girls, I couldn’t help but see similarities between the way they acted and the way UCSB freshmen act. For many I.V. students, college is the first time they have lived on their own. This newfound freedom can be quite a dangerous thing, as freshmen are tempted to test the limits to see just what they can do. I couldn’t count how many times my dormmates and I drunkenly stumbled from DP to our dorms across campus. These newbies — Irish in the summer, freshmen in the fall — just don’t quite know how things work, so they get in trouble. “You see this type of increase [in arrests and citations] in the fall, too,” Olmstead said. It seems as if the Irish students now living in I.V. are just a slightly older, foreign version of our freshman selves.

Becoming more responsible and respectful is just a matter of learning what flies here and what doesn’t. The Irish aren’t necessarily bad people who come to I.V. to ruin everything. They’re kids experiencing a parent-free existence for the first time, and trying to figure out just how to handle it. Being thrust into a brand new environment — the I.V. environment, no less — makes for an incredibly thrilling and overwhelming time. The Irish want to take full advantage — just like we UCSB students did freshman year. The Irish girls I interviewed told me they were getting tired of partying all the time — just like my friends and I got tired of making the trek to DP every weekend by January.

This isn’t to say that the Irish kids will calm down anytime soon — this is still a vacation for them. I just think that they’re not the pure evil so many I.V. locals have claimed they are. We should treat them like any other visitors: with wide, open arms. This openness part of the beauty of I.V. We’ll let them know what’s cool and what’s not. In return, I hope that they’ll respect us and our town, not ruin our already-falling-apart homes, and pass that knowledge on to future J1 students.

Oh, and it wouldn’t hurt their case if they brought over a few cases of Guinness, either.

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Let the Irish come in droves...Their wit, charm, character and willingness for fun with a smile, wink and nod make them a pleasure to have around....Just mind the trappings of freedom that many 18-20 year olds fall into.

Sláinte!

spg007 (anonymous profile)
July 3, 2008 at 4:41 p.m. (Suggest removal)

As a recently repatriated Irish resident of isla vista I read your article with disappointment but not unfortunately, shock. The " antiquated stereotyping" you speak of is a comfortable american euphemism for racism. For example, since we are clumsily using pieces anecdotal evidence to tar and feather an entire race(... ipods, rape) you may be delighted to hear that your justice system fully supports your set of values. Being told "you irish are not welcome here" in open court was an american experience i didn't think I would have in 2008(by the way, my mortal sin was an open container, the american girl who went before me with the same offence had a previous conviction and got half my fine.)

I hasten to add that most of the wild parties i saw were american house parties in which there was a huge and open drug culture, the police seem to look the other way towards irish people and the demon drink. Could it be possible that your statistics on arrests are skewed by the "stereotyping" (lovely word) you admit exists?? (american police racist?never!)

If you deny the explicit racism of this poorly written article I sugggest that you rewrite your article and replace the word irish with black.

Is mise, sadhbh.

med08 (anonymous profile)
July 29, 2008 at 12:03 p.m. (Suggest removal)

completely agree with everything sadhbh wrote above this. One of the most poorly researched pieces of gutter journalism i've ever seen. for a supposedly respected newspaper to publish blatant ridiculous unsubstantiated allegations of theft and rape is unbelievable. every irish person who was there for the summer completely loved the place, but to suggest everyone wrecks their apartments etc is a joke. As the response above states americans seem to have little problems turning a blind eye to the rampant drug culture, drink driving, abuse of the homeless etc by american college students that is so widespread out there and writes about 19 & 20 year old irish kids enjoying themselves and pumping tens of thousands of dollars into your community for a couple of months. why don't you write an article about something like that?

irish08 (anonymous profile)
August 6, 2008 at 12:08 p.m. (Suggest removal)

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