Public parks lose money, but it’s acceptable because they are generally utilized by the residences of the local jurisdiction. The muni near me shut down, not because it didn’t make money. It was beacause 95% of the rounds played were not local residents.
So what happen(ed) to the course/the land...sold off?...made into public park?...re-organizing? I have a hard time understanding how something that made money and drew revenue to the municipality was shut down, without a new and equally profitable/public windfall replacement at hand...solely on the basis of non-resident play (which could've been handled by "some" resident/non-resident policy, could it not?).
***
I too, cannot make it through an entire podcast, but I think its up to someone to say "What is
NOT the value of a municipal golf course?"...
Otherwise, the values are obvious... positive direct and indirect (local) revenue, a unique civic amenity, a place to practice, play and experience the game nearby a population, an attractive feature for new residents and casual business...
If a municipal course isn't run properly and fails these benefits, then it should change or close.
***
Thank god the ones that are there, in place, because I cannot see (in this era, hostile to public spending) many municipalities investing, buying and owning a golf course, a large public park or anything like it...Renovate/upgrade/maintain one? Maybe... I don't think even if the land were donated, most municipalities would take the up the cause...do you?
cheers vk