Joe,
I would just be careful. Having any type of interview/lunch process when someone is attempting to volunteer for something, and then not offering them the position could get a bit awkward, but that's your call
yes lower handicaps want things harder, which they see as more challenging for their games, but might make the course too challenging for the average player.
I'm not sure how much GCA type knowledge (if any) is required for the job. Most times you will be working with an architect and/or master plan already.
I think having green committees act as architect, regardless of their GCA pedigree is a dangerous proposition.
.
Joe,
As a past member of several greens committees and the chair of one now, I add the following:
Play several rounds with the candidate and discuss the course. It's much easier to get a genuine feel for what is driving that person's opinion when out on a casual round.
Yes, tell them upfront how much time you think it'll take and ask for a full commitment to that time.
Frequently, some terms at different times in a club's evolution require different skills. Interviewing, hiring and sourcing skills are immensely valuable and most private clubs have people with talent for that.
I disagree with Brian about working with an architect (less so about a master plan...which infers that process with widespread support in just in need of continuation). So many (mostly old-school) clubs with otherwise decent courses have existing, or past, ties to a particular architect that is NOT SERVING THE COURSE CORRECTLY. A good number of very eminent and prestigious clubs have fallen into this trap. It then becomes the committees job to educate themselves on GCA and different talents to achieve the right future for the course.
For the record, I hope a fellow NJ GCA'er chimes in here as he's probably the single best GC chairman I've ever known of. He successfully took a classic AWT and combined with a supporting club president to bring it into the 21st century. Of course, he managed to accomplish that with humor, hoodwinking, and tenacity....talents previously absent at that place!
Finally, If you ask the candidate what their goal is and they answer: "To leave the course better than I found it," then you know that person has at least the right intent and deserves further merit.