Courses in NC remain open, and I've played several times at UNC-Finley, which reopened ten days ago after being closed for a couple of weeks. Management has taken every precaution possible (short of being closed, of course); single carts unless with a same household rider, no range, outside touchless check-in, only five people on the putting green at a time, 15 minute tee times, no rakes, swim noodles on the flagsticks, etc. They are opening an hour later, and closing a couple of hours earlier, and the staff are all gloved and masked.
The head pro told me yesterday that while total rounds of course aren't normal because of the reduced hours and increased space between tee times, the utilization of available tee times is actually higher. Some of that would likely be from squeezing play into a tighter window, some of that would be a lack of other recreational options, and some of that would be just so many people either not working or working reduced hours. It'll be interesting to see what happens to play, assuming the course stays open, as disposable incomes shrink.
I must confess that I am highly conflicted about all of this. One the one hand, I feel safer BY FAR playing golf with my regular group (all old guys who understand how to manage their space) than I do in a grocery store, or even in a walk thru the neighborhood. Literally, I touched NOTHING that didn't come with me to the course, nor did I get within 10' or so of anybody the entire time, and in our particular case, since we always have the first two tee times, we're not even really breathing anybody else's air. And yet, something about it just feels wrong, especially as I drive home on largely empty roads past empty parking lots of closed businesses. I'm not at all guilt-prone, but this is pushing me closer to the edge on that.