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Golf-Home Owners Find Themselves in a Hole Lawsuits pile up and fairways fall into disrepair
Wall Street Journal ^ | Jan. 10, 2019 | By Candace Taylor

Posted on 01/13/2019 6:34:45 AM PST by dennisw

click here to read article


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To: dennisw

Build high density, 4 story concentrated apartnent buildings on the former golf course. Attract welfare loafers with gibmedat freebies. Just hope the gubmint does not shut down.


41 posted on 01/13/2019 7:18:27 AM PST by TheNext (Participation Award Winner = CoC)
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To: dennisw

I think turn it into a dirt bike riding area. Hills, jumps, water holes and mud. After the park opens up dry grass will look beautiful in comparison. You won’t have anyone looking for lost golf balls in the backyard but maybe some spare gas in the garage.


42 posted on 01/13/2019 7:18:36 AM PST by deepestsouth1
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To: dennisw

I live near the StoneRidge club in Poway and owned a rental property in an adjacent community that backed up on the 16th fairway of a course that also has closed (both in San Diego County). What the article fails to mention are the exploding costs of operating and maintaining golf courses, particularly for water. In the cases I cite, the clubs fell victim to new tiered water rates (think “progressive” tax rates) and were paying up to four times the amount as previously. Neither club could afford to pay the exorbitant costs. Water rates for homeowners throughout the area have also skyrocketed, thanks to govt. mismanagement, environmentalist whacko activism, and general stupidity. The solution to California’s water problems is desalination of Pacific Ocean water, now economically feasible. One plant has recently opened in San Diego, but it took 15 years to fight through all the bureaucracy and lawsuits. Six more of such plants can provide all the water needs of the our very large county — 90 miles x 70 miles — with beaches, inland valleys, mountains, and deserts.


43 posted on 01/13/2019 7:19:23 AM PST by nickedknack
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To: RFEngineer
I've always preferred to have lived on a golf course verses living on the ocean. Yes, occasionally a golf ball found its way onto my property or off my roof. On the other hand, those who live on the ocean have the potential to wake up to a storm surge engulfing them in tons of water.

Once I gave up golf for good, I moved to a home on a pond wherein my chief concern now is if an alligator decides to waddle up. Life has its risks, just depends what you want to put up with. My only specific reaction to this article is to be alert to potential risks when you buy a piece of property, both physical and financial. Pay your money take your chances.

44 posted on 01/13/2019 7:20:59 AM PST by Mouton (The media is the enemy of the people.)
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To: dennisw

Turn it into tenant farms. Good possibility that returns the land to its prior use.


45 posted on 01/13/2019 7:21:29 AM PST by gov_bean_ counter (Ruth Bader Ginsburg doctor is a taxidermist.)
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To: RegulatorCountry

In November 1991, leaving Korea enroute to Japan and Camp Zama, I was told part of my official duties as the NCOIC for DPCA was to ensure 80+ MWR facilities were properly secured (fixed in three weeks as I handled my orientation, and secondly to play Golf. In Japan Golf was the currency of millionaires with status. I played for three years, left Japan and sold my clubs never to play again. I hate golf. However, being in the concrete jungle called Tokyo or the small towns, the noise of the modern world can never reach a silent pitch - but on the golf course you didn’t hear a car, and you saw a stream, ponds, birds, rabbits, squirrels, hawks, ect., and the sounds natural. Golf in Japan serves to bring the city dwellers back to nature, but only for those who can afford it.


46 posted on 01/13/2019 7:21:39 AM PST by Jumper (c-h)
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To: Alberta's Child

In many instances, developers retained an interest in the golf course, clubhouse, and residual development rights. This permits a wide range of profiteering. Or, the developer sold the clubhouse and course to the country club at an inflated price, which then had to ding the members for decades to pay off the debt. In short, many golf courses have embedded excess costs.


47 posted on 01/13/2019 7:24:06 AM PST by Rockingham
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To: Eric in the Ozarks

I figured as much. it’s like that show Longmire set in a back woods county of Wyoming...where they have more crime n killings than Chitcago.


48 posted on 01/13/2019 7:24:34 AM PST by rockrr ( Everything is different now...)
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To: dennisw

My strategy has always been to do things that KEEP ME OUT OF THE BARS AND OFF THE GOLF COURSE.

I have some rental property that at least I make some money with my time. I try to have hobbies that at least break even.


49 posted on 01/13/2019 7:24:43 AM PST by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: ShadowAce
move to a place where strangers are walking that close to your house all day
My BIL bought a condo on a golf course many moons ago ... but sold it just a year later.
Seems that too many times he'd walk out onto his patio, and there'd be a golfer taking a leak 50-60 feet away.
50 posted on 01/13/2019 7:27:32 AM PST by oh8eleven (RVN '67-'68)
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To: HarleyD

FRISBEE GOLF

Live near a Frisbee Golf course. It stays busy and actually attracts quality people. The young have a preoccupation instead of vandalism.


51 posted on 01/13/2019 7:31:57 AM PST by TheNext (Participation Award Winner = CoC)
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To: Alberta's Child
" It looks like the golf angle is only a small part of a much bigger issue that a lot of delusional people overlooked: They bought homes in homeowners' associations that had the legal authority to impose some ridiculously onerous regulations."

Good point. While an HOA is supposed to be a vehicle for enhancing property values, it can be a nightmare when taken over by people who feel the need to be important in order to give meaning to their lives.

Our golf course is well managed and thoughtfully coordinated with the HOA that maintains soft handed order to keep the community in good shape. Maybe it's because we have a good many ex-Californians who respect self determination and personal liberties.

We moved here from a golf community where a lot of PIPs (previously important people) kept teh community in constant turmoil. It was like high school, but with money.

52 posted on 01/13/2019 7:33:47 AM PST by Baynative ("A man is not old until regrets take the place of dreams." - John Barrymore)
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To: dennisw

My late mother lived in apartments next to golf courses in San Diego County for the last 20 years of her life. She never, to my knowledge played the game. Did suffer some broken windows. But it was nice having a open view and she did enjoy watching them play the game. Golfers, by far, are not the worst sort of strangers have walking near your house. But, there was, a couple of years ago, talk of restricting the water that courses could use. I wonder if the course in question wasn’t killed because of that.


53 posted on 01/13/2019 7:35:59 AM PST by hanamizu
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To: dennisw

I once bought a lifetime membership at a video rental store.


54 posted on 01/13/2019 7:36:42 AM PST by P.O.E. (Pray for America)
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To: dennisw

Oh. So sad. My, my.

But hey. It might be a good place to stock quail and pheasant …just saying.


55 posted on 01/13/2019 7:37:02 AM PST by Vaquero (Don't pick a fight with an old guy. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you .)
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To: RFEngineer

“The bottom line is that socialism never works, and collective ownership of a golf course is just another take on socialism.”

What about collective ownership of a company by those who are stock holders?


56 posted on 01/13/2019 7:43:16 AM PST by KrisKrinkle (Blessed be those who know the depth and breadth of ignorance. Cursed be those who don't.)
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To: oh8eleven
"...too many times he'd walk out onto his patio, and there'd be a golfer taking a leak 50-60 feet away."

If she apologized all should be forgiven. When people gotta go, people gotta go.

57 posted on 01/13/2019 7:44:33 AM PST by Baynative ("A man is not old until regrets take the place of dreams." - John Barrymore)
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To: Baynative
When people gotta go, people gotta go.
So, you'd be okay exposing your kids and grandkids to people urinating in your back yard all hours of the day?
58 posted on 01/13/2019 7:52:18 AM PST by oh8eleven (RVN '67-'68)
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To: elcid1970

Actually golf stand for “Gentlemen Only Ladies Forbidden” Ah the good old days in Scotland.


59 posted on 01/13/2019 7:54:21 AM PST by Kozy (new age haruspex; "Everyone has a plan 'till they get punched in the mouth.")
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To: Bernard
Re-purpose shutdown courses into new housing developments with small park areas adjacent to the former club house - - (converted to upscale neighborhood 'community center'...)

Rezoned area around original club house could include tennis courts and bike paths. Fees drop - community use expands...

60 posted on 01/13/2019 7:55:49 AM PST by GOPJ (Replace furloughed government workers with illegals for ten bucks an hour. Show dems how it feels.)
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