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Huge homecoming parties result in arrests, fines across Canadian college towns

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HALIFAX -

On several big Canadian campuses Monday, the morning chatter wasn't about classwork or assignments. Instead, students traded gossip about some of the huge parties that took place over the weekend.

Thousands of post-secondary students packed the streets in Guelph, Ont., London, Ont. and Halifax on Saturday, breaking liquor laws, COVID-19 restrictions and in some cases, property.

But some students got more than a homecoming hangover for their efforts, as police in Halifax for public drunkenness. Police in London . Partygoers in Guelph were .

College town rowdiness may not be new, but it seems public patience has evaporated during the COVID-19 pandemic.

"Enjoy the fines & upcoming academic discipline hearings you rightly deserve," Guelph mayor Saturday.

Halifax city councillor Waye Mason blamed the high number of first-year students as a result of the number of high-school graduates who deferred post-secondary studies amid the pandemic.

"You have twice the population of students who have no kind of grounding in adult behaviour in public," he told CTV National News.

In a , Dalhousie University admonished those who attended what it called an "unsanctioned" and "illegal" event, urging them to get tested for COVID-19 and "not to attend classes or general on-campus activities for one week."

Dalhousie's student union fired back, insisting the incident was predictable and preventable while criticizing school administration.

"Dalhousie currently has an on-campus dry policy. You're also not allowed to have visitors in residence," Madeleine H. Stinson, president of the student union, told CTV National News. "We know students were going to party and Dalhousie created it so that they couldn't do so on campus."

Meanwhile, Halifax police are investigating the events of the weekend and said it could result in charges. Dalhousie has also threatened to fine or even to expel students who participated in the party. 

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