At my old club in the UK a long term member brought a suit against the club when he slipped and fell on a hill. The steps leading up to the tee were removed for cleaning (not sure why) and the member claimed the club (ie him), knew it was a dangerous situation - hence the reason for the steps in the first place. The club unwisely settled with the member not realizing insurance company had just recently gone bust. In the re-negotiation of settlement the member received cash, 10 years free dues and a new collection of golfing clothes. He claimed his old clothes didn't fit anymore since the lay-off from golf due to the injury. To pay for suit the club had to issue an assessment to its members (I wonder if BAD MAN chipped in?). Needless to say this chap was not thought very highly of by a great percentage of the membership.
So yes, the blame culture exists everywhere in varying degrees - that is what insurance is meant to mitigate.
Folks, at some point you have to give it a rest. American memberships have their reasons for not following a model more in line with the GB&I. Much of that is down to cultural differences. Legalities and tax are issues which can be overcome, but culture is not something that should be overcome. More than any nation I know, Americans prize the right to privacy and individual rights. These are historic rights with origins dating back to reactions to the British Crown. This isn't going to change in my lifetime. Most clubs choose to take advantage of allowable outside income by hosting large events - if they care about outside income at all. There is no question this can be seen as a more efficient way to take in the money. The system is what it is. At the end of the day, even though I would hope clubs feel some obligation to to not only preserve historic golfing grounds, but also share those grounds, in fact, memberships have no such obligation. Essentially, where nobody is harmed, nobody can call foul.
Ciao
Ciao
Mr. Arble,
I believe you hit the nail rather squarely; it is a right to privacy issue.
…and as Mr. Mucci has pointed out, to some degree, whether it is acceptable or not, it is a legal issue for some clubs.
All,
While Mr. Mucci’s pedophile example seems far-fetched, slipping and falling as a guest on the dining room…not as a guest of a member, but one of these “member for a day” passes everyone is clamoring for, is a reality.
I guess clubs could, upon entering the hallowed grounds, issue some kind of “we are free from everything you or we do to you while you are here for five hours” document, but then the club wouldn’t really be truly private would it?
Again, in Scotland/England, it is (apparently) customary to call a private club…private, even though, it is semi-private (allowing outside play unsponsored). Again, that is their prerogative, but I wish for the life of me the gentlemen representing this system would quit saying it is PRIVATE. Private means we/they pick and choose at their own discretion, by their own discretion, who gets on the property. Racist/sexist/homophobe/bigoted/silver spoon/Ponzi-schemed rich…doesn’t matter, they pick. Is it right? I will say they have THE right.
Private clubs are not parks where the public owns/pays a piece of the rent, but that seems to be the perception? The beef then is the 1) lack of (perceived) ability to play a top tier course 2) perceived or real snobbiness 3) perceived unfairness in ranking a course in the top 50 without the public at large getting at least one round per citizen at a price resembling a nicer semi/public course in ones own town provided they don’t show up in tabasco shirts, cargo shorts, green joys, and a miller lite bag.
1) Again, can be taken care of with a hand-written or typed letter, a friend, or acquaintance who is schmoozed. If not, then would you really want to play on a course so unwelcoming that you, a friendly and honest guy, couldn’t get on without a good dose of humility?
2) That is human nature and people have the right to be themselves. If Mr. Mucci showed up (who I can tell has a great sense of humor) showed up in a seersucker suit/bow tie and loafers no socks to the local dive in Pittsburgh, would the patrons welcome him with open arms, stare, pick a fight, buy him a beer? It goes both ways. Most of the wealthy people (I am firmly middle class) I have played with hardly recognize their fortune in being able to play where they play from an architectural standpoint. Yes, they muddle Ross/Tillinghast over and over again during the round, but could hardly tell you anything more than who designed it.
3) In America, you have a right to invent something big or work at a factory. You can get a degree and make 100k or get the same degree and make 50k. You make your own destiny. Oftentimes in life, A students teach B students who work for C students. We have the right to make our life what we want, but not the right (or access) to someone else’s property despite our desire, a ranking in a magazine, architectural value, or because “God made the land, we are simply stewards”. Part of what makes America great is the right to privacy and free association. Because a person thinks “A” should happen doesn’t make it so.