I'll have to disagree with SBusch:
I understand that it's a municipal course, but it will always fascinate me to think that the same players would NEVER complain if there was a lake on the entire right side of the hole. But they complain about a central pot bunker.
Look at the pictures, on the first one:
yes there is that bunker but after that, the last 160 yards of the hole is all fairway (45 yards it looks like) and a small bunker. Go look at a new municipal course recently built, you'll in the same area, one bunker at 100 yards, at least 2 around the green and a 30 yards wide fairway.
on the third picture:
the only bunker I would take out is the one on the left of the fairway, but what you see is a wide open fairway with the bunker far enough out there that only decent player will reach them.
on the fourth picture:
guess what, nobody complains about that lake, on a everyday basis: you'll see 20 balls in the lake for 1 ball in the central hazard of the 6th hole. big wide fairway, bunkers at the green, I don't understand why they don't mow the space in between the bunkers though
It's just that if you go with the philosophy: it's a municipal course, listen to the seniors, you'll end up taking out: central hazard, bunkers on the right side, false front, high grass, bunkers short right of a green, contours on a green, out of bounds, long par 4's, creeks, end then the same players would say the course is boring.
Instead of listen at them complaining: just asked those seniors: what would they do, give them a blank canvas and see; you'll end up closer to TPC at Sawgrass than what Gil proposed
Read: How soft are today's golfer by Mike Clayton
Once again: people need to learn to play golf, not swing at a ball