What exactly does better serve their customers mean? There are an unbelievable number of instances where companies did act recklessly regarding public safety...something you seem to suggest doesn't happen...history tells us differently. I don't think change comes easily or quickly where matters of safety or ecology erode profits. I would suggest that most supers try to deliver the course conditions the customer wants....hence the reason for using pesticides in the first place. It is budgets and regulation which normally drive change....sometimes a philosophical stance does as well, but it is usually justified as a money saving operation...win-win.
It has been suggested that golf is such a small percentage of the problem that it should be given a pass and supers, clubs and the customer should dictate how and when pesticides are used. I take the opposite view and think because golf is so small that it is an obvious target for strict regulation. Its not as if growing food is at stake, so why should there be any risk of poison? Why shouldn't I be protected from pesticides while walking the fairways of a golf course?
What exactly is so important that a risk assessment could possibly justify the use of something potentially dangerous to grow grass? A conclusion such as this leaves me baffled.
Someone mentioned that cars pollute. When golf is anywhere near as important as cars are to the economy then lets talk. Hell, I bet the cars people drive just to a golf course have more of an impact on the economy than does the course. So lets drop the silly comparisons as they are not only unhelpful, but misleading.
As has been stated...changes are here and more are to come. I suggest that digging in is seriously bad PR for golf...an industry which can ill afford bad PR.
Golf and most businesses serve their customers by providing desirable products that they will buy with regularity at a price that allows the enterprise to continue as a going concern. Even if they are amoral and only driven by profits, the many millions of businesses would not knowingly go out to harm and kill their customers- not good for repeat business.
Businesses are people. People are imperfect. Yep, there are many instances of businesses screwing the pooch, and in some cases knowingly doing so. The cases cited by your confederates are high-profile examples, but given the millions upon millions of businesses in the U.S., a) the bad actors (different than not having the accurate information and science at the time) account for a very small fraction, b) the consuming public is generally well aware of the risks and a sufficient number voted that the benefits outweighed them, and c) at least in the U.S., we have a very large cadre of for-profit watchdogs- the trial lobby- which stands ready to pounce on the alleged offenders.
Many are willing to cede control to the relative few, biased, humans just like you and me to "protect" us from those driven by the profit motive. I could spend some time and note the many, many instances of political corruption, malfeasance, self-dealing, despoiling the environment, allowing the violation of laws they enshrined to protect endangered species in favor of a superior political cause. Just look at the EPA in CO and GA in recent years.
I am not arguing in favor of no regulation. Far from it. As someone once said, "If men were angels, we wouldn't need government". I am suggesting that we need a strong check on those seeking to govern us, and that can't be an administrative and legal process which assigns whatever it wants to the benefits of strict business and environmental regulations, minimizes the costs and concludes that a total ban is the answer.
Mind you, if I believe that a course is spraying too much, I can seek others (like Jon's or Duncan's) to beat my ball around. If government tells me I can't do something and I do it anyways, I may end up in jail. We like options on this site, or so we say. I can either buy a product from several companies, I can buy a substitute, or I can learn to live without it. With a ban or a prohibition, only the last option is viable.
Some may say that this is an exaggerated philosophical view, and that we are just talking about pure golf course conditions versus something less so, but totally acceptable. My argument is that this thread- the banning of chemicals on golf courses is coming and we better get used to it- is hardly an isolated instance. It is death by a thousand cuts and, it seems to me that for most who are of the "it is inevitable, we might as well enjoy it" mindset, you are likely the most vulnerable. Those who have money will have options. Those financially constricted will have to take what is dished out to them.