Shivas,
No.
Remember too, that club's change philosophy as membership demographics change, and new leaders ascend into authority.
Since the Superintendent is an employee of the club, he must do the club's bidding, and that's not a static mandate.
SL Solow,
If you had to have a committee rather than a single individual,
It would seem that the best committee would be one composed of those concerned members who have the golf course's, the member's and club's best interest at heart,
who have the time to devote to this pursuit, and the intelligence and common sense to provide the best imput and make the most prudent decisions.
But, I don't think this can be achieved by appealing, politically, to the broadest base of the membership.
It may seem elitist, but you have to select the best men and women for the committee, and not cross sections of every faction of the membership.
I know of a club that had 150 members and 20 of them were on a committee. The club only had 12 board members, but 20 members were on a committee. The meetings were unruley, and little got done after they finished discussing all of the ridiculous items that each member threw out on the floor for discussion.
I think you have to select the most qualified individuals, irrespective of their backround or demographic, and hope that they will assist you by serving.
Once you have that core, one of the committees most important tasks is the ongoing recruitment of other qualified members, such that generations of members will serve on the green committee, providing expertise, experience and continuity for the club.
All too often, a new chairman is named, and he/she terminates all previous green committee members and names a new group with ABSOLUTELY NO prior experience or knowledge. And their agenda is often SCAREY
In my limited experience, if you want to stifle a member who complains about the golf course, put them on the committee and put them in charge of a project. It's amazing how quickly them become silent or unavailable.
The other difficult task many committee chairman face is deflecting or resisting fads that groups of members want to implement.