Posted on 03/21/2011 8:12:11 PM PDT by jazusamo
Actually, it’s way simpler than that. I also can not remember the last time I disagreed with Dr. Sowell, but municipal golf courses have one main purpose: To raise the property values in a municipality. If they create revenues through greens fees, great. However, municipal golf courses (at least in the northeast) typically come into being when an existing private club is having financial difficulty. When the municipality buys the course and makes it public, it becomes a selling point for future residential transactions. Thus, the course not only pays for itself through greens fees, but also adds to municipal taxes as everyone’s property increases in value. It’s simple economics. Plus, a golf course looks a lot nicer than a few more strip malls.
So the private club has trouble making the thing work (probably because of their tax burden), but the town can come in, spend the taxpayer money to buy it (or is that extort it from some private citizens), and make money where the private company could not???? This also makes me wonder how much the taxpayer spends to raise the value of his property. Judging from other public investments the taxpayer probably spends $1.00 to raise his property value 50 cents.
As I told Seaplaner: Theres a name for those who enjoy the benefits they force others to pay for: Liberals.
I sympathize with your point. I have female friends who basically basically voted on: Obama = young...tall...sounds intelligent, McCain = old...wrinkly...he's a Republican he must be mean.
But it may be a generational thing more than a sex thing. More women voted for Nixon than for JFK.
These are all valid points, but not relevant to my disagreement with Dr. Sowell. He seems to think that municipalities build golf courses to be enjoyed by a majority of citizens who are golfers. Private clubs can go bankrupt for any number of reasons, but sometimes even the non-golfing residents are able to appreciate the value of a golf course over more development in a small community.
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