In yesterday's NYT, the following story appeared:
Six-Hole Course Is Coming to Bay Ridge
By DAMON HACK
Published: November 1, 2006
With a view of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, and within steps of one of New York’s oldest golf courses, large groups of children could soon be able to frolic over rolling fairways and humpbacked greens.
Children ages 5 to 17 and accompanying parents or guardians would have free access to a center that includes a six-hole golf course, a nine-station driving range and a 4,275-square-foot clubhouse with classroom space and an outdoor seating area. The CityParks Junior Golf Center will sit on 11.8 acres abutting Dyker Beach Golf Course and is scheduled for completion in September 2007. “The bigger picture for us is, we serve thousands of kids in getting them started in golf, underserved neighborhood kids who wouldn’t otherwise play golf,” said Philip Craft, a spokesman for the City Parks Foundation, a private, nonprofit organization. Several officials, including Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, are scheduled to attend an 11 a.m. announcement next to Dyker Beach, a course that first opened in the 1890s. Tiger Woods’s father, Earl, was said to have become smitten with golf at Dyker Beach, where he played while stationed at Fort Hamilton during the 1970s.
According to the City Parks Foundation, the junior golf center is being funded publicly and privately, with $1.5 million from the city and $500,000 from the State Senate. The City Parks Foundation is raising the rest. The total cost includes $3 million for construction and $3 million for an endowment to support yearly programming, operations and course maintenance. Although the junior golf center will not open for almost a year, it is already beginning to take shape. The golf course will stretch over six holes but can also be configured as a three- or four-hole layout, allowing players to hit longer clubs. The course will also include spectator bleachers, a practice green, a chipping area and a practice bunker. The junior center will soon have young golfers hitting shots from fairways across a tree line from older players at Dyker Beach. “There may be some netting,” Craft said.
This is, IMHO, a gigantic step in the right direction for protecting the future of the game. It took insight from a # of local park & city officials, local citizens and others to make this happen.
THE $64,000 Question is:
WHY THE HELL CAN'T THE USGA FIGURE THIS OUT AND CREATE THIS KIND OF PROGRAM THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY?
They make $10-20 million per US Open and can't find a way to support this?? Instead, they charter private jets for the Executive Committee members???
Ridiculous!