Simply raising a large area by a foot or so to waste fill is a pet peeve of mine. Seems like it could/should be used for something other than waste.
When I draw grading plans.....dinosaur that I am.....we run the cut and fills. Even with computers, where I work more and more in 3D, I often do pencil sketches first, plot out the cuts and fills with red and green in tracing of the contours, run the planimeter, a magic device that somehow measures irregular areas like contour lines, and see where it comes out. Yes, it is possible to simply raise or lower the area, which shifts 1610 cubic yards per acre from one to the other (i.e., if a one acre green site is 1600 yards short of fill, simply lower the entire plan one foot and voila, it's balanced. And for some greens, tees, or even fairways, that is a viable solution.
I much prefer to look and see where there is an abundance of too much fill and redesign to eliminate that so that instead of moving, say, 3000 CY to build a green, I might lower that total to 2,000 CY or less. It certainly ends up lowering the project budget, and usually, eliminating excess fill (and sometimes cut) tends to look more natural, if vision to the green, drainage, etc. aren't affected.
Another pet peeve of mine, back when I had employees doing large swatches of our grading plans, was grading for the sake of grading, with one example of adding catch basins other than in the natural low points, even if changing the grades around the basin. I have had grading plans go out, where valleys were filled and hills cut for no particular reason other than the designer was simply grading everywhere and taking liberties. One of my rules of thumb, even when leveling mountains in Asia, was to maintain the basic drainage patterns as much as possible, even if we are raising a valley 30 meters or so.
I even flew one of my now remote draftsmen in from California on a recent project. The land was perfectly gently rolling, but he had cut his teeth on Asia projects, and graded everywhere. My training and instinct was that the only grading necessary was lowering a small hill that blocked the view of the LZ and another that needed to be valleyed out to see the green. The rest was perfect 2-5% rolls, but he graded everywhere, lifting a fw bunker base up 3-4 feet, when it was visible at base grade, and grading everywhere, but really just moving the natural contours up or down a foot because he didn't realize what he was doing.
Years ago, I had a negotiation with a well known pro to be his designer on the west coast. I went to the office, and viewed their plans. They weren't happy at all when I pointed out that there plans were, by my standards, a bit not good. (tried to find a nicer way to say it.) Specifically, they graded an entire downhill fairway, again making minor changes of grade that really didn't help or change the hole, i.e., they raised most of the fw one foot for no particular reason. Then, the drained that entire downhill fw to a 6" catch basin about 10 feet of the front right of the green, which was solely undersized, and likely led to a puddle in a place where most golfers miss.
Needless to say, they broke off negotiations, although, I can't say I was upset. I really didn't want to work for someone else.