Well Dennis, not only do I think cities should own recreation
venues, I think its in the best interest of its citizens that they
do.
 
You ask about city owned liquor stores.  Well, they exist all
around us.  Especially in small towns.  Usually they are called the
Muni for Municipal liquor.
 
Back to golf.  Cities own and operate playgrounds, hockey rinks,
baseball and softball fields to name only a few sport venues.  While
a gold course does take up a much larger acreage than any of these,
it falls into the same category.  These local facilities are
available to anyone who wants to make use of them.
 
Lets add a bit more controversy.  The state owns the metrodome,
Minneapolis owns the Target Center.  St. Paul owns the Xcel Center. 
The right to operate and profit from these venue were signed over to
private parties.  Yet who gets to use them?  Multi-millionaires and
their millionaire employees that is who.
 
Shouldn't the common folks have an opportunity to take advantage of
public owned facilities?  I think so.  its a quality of life issue.
 
Mike Fratto
Payne Phalen
 
BTW:  I don't play golf

>>> "Dennis Tester" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 04/12/2005 8:54:44 AM
>>>


http://www.twincities.com/mld/twincities/11369831.htm

>From the Pioneer Press:   

St. Paul spent more than $4 million renovating the Highland Park
golf course, which opens today for the first time since closing for
construction in fall 2002.  

Before the makeover, Highland's poor condition drove away golfers,
said Bob Cotie, the course's head professional and manager since
1978. The number of rounds played at Highland eroded steadily from
more than 50,000 per season in the early 1990s to about 38,000 in
2002, he said.  
"The golfers are going to love it," Cotie said. "This is a
first-class course."

If 50,000 golfers agree, the project will have succeeded. That's
the number of rounds needed per season for the course to start
making money, Cotie said.

The work cost $4.5 million. The city borrowed the money to pay for
the project and will use greens fees and revenue from a new driving
range that opened last year to repay the debt. The borrowing took
the form of revenue bonds, which means no city property taxes are
pledged to pay off the debt.

Although Highland celebrates a milestone Tuesday, the course's
backers have another dream. Harris and others are working to secure
about $4 million to renovate the clubhouse, a 76-year-old building.
State lawmakers declined to include money for the project in this
year's bonding bill.

I could never understand why the lefties in this town never seemed
to mind that the city owns and operates three golf courses.  Besides
being an elitist, white-man activity that no self-respecting
activist would associate with (not unlike polo or fox hunting),
think of all the real estate that's being misused ... real estate
that could be developed into affordable housing or some other
worthwhile use.  When they're finished, they will have spent $8.5
million so rich white guys can hob-nob with their corporate clients
by using a stick to hit a ball into a hole in the ground.  While
people starve.

But seriously, as a matter of principle, should the city government
be in the business of owning and operating golf courses?  What's
next, liquor stores?  Don't tell ME we don't have any money.


Dennis Tester
Mac-Groveland

When governments attempt to control the economy for the good of the
people, they end up controlling the people for the good of the
economy




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