Tom Doak & Kelly,
Adjusting the initiation fee to join is easy to do, it's the operations budget that's become the real problem.
Club's tried to get away from having their initiation fee classified as a bond, redeemable at par or a varying amount.
Many clubs no longer issue bonds when the golfer joins.
The initiation fee is of no consequence unless the money was being shifted to the operations budget.
With most clubs putting every capital project on hold, the real area of concern is operations.
Over the past few decades many clubs have tried to be all things to all members, thus, exponentially increasing the operations budgets.
Clubs are going to have to rethink operations and get operating costs under control.
If annual dues are $ 25,000, charging $ 500,000, $ 250,000, $ 100,000,
$ 50,000 or $ 25,000 to get in won't have much of an impact in terms of attracting a substantial cadre of new members. Potential members will look at total "costs to belong" and not at just the initiation fee.
I know clubs that have gone from $ 200,000+ to $ 50,000 on their initiation fees and to date, there's been no substantive impact.
There's a second ripple to this dilema, the pending assessments due at the end of 2009 which will be the result of operational/membership shortfalls.