Ally
I'm pretty sure that anyone who shouts "economic development and lots of jobs" will get more than a favourable hearing and thats the crux of it. The vast majority of courses in this country may belong to a traditional old fashioned club however when was the last time one of those was created or an existing one relocated to a new golf course ? There may be some (very) rare examples, and I'm struggling to think of any beyond Askernish which is a revised golf club and the high end "clubs" like Renaissance, Archerfield, Loch Lomond etc. If you think about it, pretty well all golf development over the last, what 50 years ?, has been commercially orientated. Therefore I've got to think the next golf development will be as well and I really don't see the local authorities giving a stuff what Hamish Grey says when someone pitches up and talks about jobs and investment.
Adrian
I think the secret going forward is for clubs to be more sustainable in an economic sense. The top notch clubs with good set ups and good courses will survive simply by being the best, and the low end local clubs will likely survive because they already run on tight budgets and can cut their cloth to suit more easily than others.
Where I think we'll see casualties is in the middle clubs that fancied themselves country clubs, they will likely suffer but even then their are savings to be made starting with the clubhouse. We've talked about this before but thats the first place I would make big savings. If I had to I would run a bulldozer through it and have a couple of portacabins for changing rooms. For those more interested in the "afternoon at the club" lifestyle, let them go to a health club and leave the golfers to it.
Niall