A small town mayor has a big problem, and one of the root causes of the problem he’s having is because of his pick for Governor in 2021. Seaside Heights Mayor Anthony Vaz, a Republican, openly endorsed Phil Murphy for Governor and now he’s paying dearly for that decision.
Juvenile justice reforms enacted by Murphy have made policing the rowdy summertime destination nearly impossible, and the rowdy teens coming to the borough know it.
Seaside Heights has long struggled to market itself as a family-friendly destination, a place where sandy beaches, boardwalk games, and nostalgic summer vibes beckon parents and children alike.
Yet, the chaos that erupted over Memorial Day weekend 2025 paints a starkly different picture. Far from a wholesome retreat, the borough descended into a scene of violence, arrests, and disorder, exposing the failure of its family-oriented rebranding and leaving Mayor Anthony Vaz with serious decisions to make and questions to answer.
The weekend kicked off with a wild Friday night that saw multiple fights break out across Seaside Heights, resulting in dozens of arrests and several injuries. The borough was overwhelmed by rowdy crowds, with police struggling to contain the violence that marred the unofficial start of summer.
This wasn’t an isolated incident but a continuation of a troubling pattern. Last year, a false report of gunfire triggered panic, leading to 90 arrests, including a dozen minors. The 2025 Memorial Day weekend proved that, despite promises of reform, Seaside Heights remains a tinderbox for trouble.
Mayor Vaz has championed a vision of Seaside Heights as a safe, welcoming destination. In the lead-up to the weekend, he emphasized proactive measures: over 100 police officers on duty, a borough-wide curfew for minors from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m., and a court injunction to block unauthorized pop-up parties promoted on social media.
Vaz’s message to parents was blunt: “Keep your kids home. We’re not babysitting for you.” Yet, these measures failed spectacularly.
They didn’t listen.
The curfew didn’t deter unruly teens, the police presence couldn’t prevent widespread brawls, and the injunction, while a novel idea, did little to curb the influx of troublemakers. If anything, the chaos suggests that Vaz’s strategy underestimated the scale of the problem.
The root of Seaside Heights’ failure lies in its inability to reconcile its family-friendly aspirations with its reality as a magnet for rowdy, unsupervised youth.
It is also compounded by Governor Phil Murphy’s new juvenile justice reform policies which handcuff local police to enforce civility, law, and order. Let’s not forget though, Vaz can’t blame the governor on this one, because in 2021, Vaz was the only Republican mayor in Ocean County to endorse Murphy for governor.
Memorial Day weekend, coinciding with prom season, draws crowds of teenagers seeking unchecked freedom. Vaz himself acknowledged this, noting that “good kids” can get swept up in bad behavior when left unsupervised. But his administration’s response—curfews, parental warnings, and increased policing—feels like a Band-Aid on a gaping wound.
The borough has implemented similar measures before, including a curfew last year to curb boardwalk overcrowding, yet the problems persist.
One glaring issue is the lack of infrastructure to support a true family-oriented environment. Seaside Heights’ boardwalk, while iconic, is geared more toward arcade games and bars than activities that engage families with young children. The borough’s reliance on seasonal tourism also means it prioritizes short-term crowds over sustainable community-building. When unaccompanied minors flood the town, blocking parking spaces and disrupting locals, as Vaz has complained, it’s clear the borough is ill-equipped to manage the influx.
A family destination requires more than just a beach—it needs safe, structured entertainment and a culture that discourages mayhem.
Vaz’s rhetoric doesn’t help. His call for parents to take responsibility, while valid, sidesteps the borough’s role in creating an environment that enables disorder. Telling families “come down, have fun, but if you’re looking for trouble, you’re going to be in trouble” sounds tough but does little to reassure parents who now see Seaside Heights as a risky bet.
The mayor’s insistence on “zero tolerance” for disruptive behavior rings hollow when the same issues resurface year after year. If Seaside Heights is serious about its family-friendly image, Vaz must explain why his administration hasn’t learned from past failures. Juveniles are now a protected class in New Jersey, and police know it. The juveniles know it. It’s a recipe for disaster.
The Memorial Day mayhem shows that the borough’s resources were strained under the sheer volume of visitors simply unmanageable.
Vaz has pointed to external factors, like out-of-town organizers promoting pop-up parties, but this excuse only goes so far. A town that bills itself as a family haven should have robust systems to anticipate and neutralize such threats, not scramble for last minute hail mary’s.
If Vaz wants to salvage Seaside Heights’ reputation, he must move beyond reactive measures and invest in a fundamental transformation—more family-focused attractions, better crowd management, and a culture that prioritizes safety over chaos.