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Bath golfers outraged that loss-making course could be turned into cycling centre

Every round at the Entry Hill course costs the taxpayer £8

Bath golfers are campaigning to save two loss-making golf courses after Bath and North East Somerset Council revealed that each round played costs taxpayers £8. One golfer complained that a consultation on the future of the Entry Hill site was taken over by a ‘cycling lobby on steroids' after 78 per cent of respondents expressed support for turning it into a cycling centre.

Somerset Live reports that the consultation, run at the start of the year, revealed huge support for transforming Entry Hill into a family cycle centre and mountain bike park.

60 per cent of respondents also expressed support for an alternative plan where the site would become a park with a cafe. 

Only 19 per cent of responses said the golf course should be retained and run under a different management model.

Entry Hill has had a continued decline in visitors for more than a decade and now operates at a loss to the council of around £80,000 per year.

Councillor Paul Crossley, cabinet member for Community Services, commented: “As noted in a survey by Sport England, usage of golf courses has sadly been in decline nationally for many years and that is certainly something we’ve seen at both our golfing sites.

“We acknowledge that the idea of changing Entry Hill to a different use is opposed by residents who still enjoy playing golf there, but that the consultation results also show strong opinions from thousands of members of the community who wish to use it differently.”

Golfer Elizabeth Hallam complained that the consultation had been weighted against the sport and targeted by a “cycling lobby on steroids”.

Hallam claims there are hundreds of “latent golfers” in the city if the Entry Hill and Approach courses could find a new operator.

Crossley said there had been lobbying from golfers as well as cyclists and that a decision had no yet been made.

“It is not right that public money has continued to support the current model of operation at these two sites. I assure everyone that as we go through this process there is not a predetermined outcome."

Crossley said the 18-hole course at another site, Approach, would remain but that the 12-hole course there could instead be used for “golf-derived sports” like frisbee golf or foot golf.

In October, we reported how Leeds City Council were planning to close Temple Newsam Golf Club and replace it with a cycling centre.

That course had been costing the taxpayer £200,000 a year.

The council has since decided to merely reduce the size of the club from 27 to 18 holes.

Final proposals are expected to go before the council’s decision-making executive committee later this year.

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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44 comments

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mdavidford replied to Gus T | 3 years ago
1 like

I'm not a golfer. And I'm not particularly in favour of keeping the golf course. I'm just against the misuse and abuse of figures and statistics.

If they'd said it was currently having to be subsidised to the tune of £8 per round played I'd be fine with that. But 'every round costs the taxpayer £8' just isn't true.

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to mdavidford | 3 years ago
1 like

Seems a bit of a pedantic objection, to me.  The taxpayer is in effect paying £8 towards each round currently played.  Personally I'd rather they used that to subsidise something other than golf.

  But maybe the kind of people who play golf have more political clout than those (younger?) people who prefer some other kind of physical activity.

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Awavey replied to FluffyKittenofTindalos | 3 years ago
1 like

I wouldnt want to see this or any council run facility closed purely because we felt the politics of it only favoured in our view the rich and elitist, its perfectly reasonable for a council to make all aspects of sport more accessible to everyone in this way, if it gets old retired people out walking just a few miles every week,having that social contact with each other, its overall a good thing.

and those people arent going to replace their golf with hopping on MTBs,so be mindful of that impact.

where I question the councils decision to support this place,and it would be the same were it an all singing/dancing cycle park, is the size of the subsidy to keep it going, if the place is losing so much money, you have to question if its really financially viable, and that aspect rather than whether I like golf or not, or whether Id prefer something completely different should be the only deciding factor.

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brooksby replied to Awavey | 3 years ago
1 like

Awavey wrote:

I wouldnt want to see this or any council run facility closed purely because we felt the politics of it only favoured in our view the rich and elitist, ...

Minor point, but those rich and elitist are often more than happy to close council run facilities which only help the poor ... It only encourages them, allegedly.

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Awavey replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
0 likes

and that may well be the case, no one said the human race was perfect, I just think we are skirting abit close to some classical English class system snobbery here on golf because of our preconceptions about it, and just because we are mostly pro cycling in our outlook, so of course a bike park looks a fantastic idea to us vs some rubbish golf course.

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mdavidford replied to FluffyKittenofTindalos | 3 years ago
0 likes

It's a question of how it frames the issue, though. For instance, the council could choose to try to increase the number of people playing (by advertising, running promotions, etc.). If 'every round costs the taxpayer £8', then on the face of it that would appear to be a foolish thing to do - each time you encourage someone to play when they wouldn't have before is going to end up costing you even more money (on top of what the promotion costs you). In reality though, it's likely that most of the fees from each person that walks through the door go towards reducing the amount of the subsidy. In fact, if you managed to encourage people to turn out by offering them free rounds it's unlikely to much increase the cost base, and so the subsidy per round played would go down, and maybe approach something more justifiable.

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sean1 | 3 years ago
6 likes

Swindon Council is redeveloping a loss making 9 hole municipal golf course into a cycling circuit, BMX pump track plus football/cricket/croquet!! facilities.  A bit like Odd Down.....

https://www.swindon.gov.uk/news/article/142/state-of-the-art_sports_faci...

 

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Hirsute replied to sean1 | 3 years ago
1 like

Croquet does not have pitches ! They are lawns or courts.

 

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Rik Mayals unde... replied to sean1 | 3 years ago
0 likes

Preston council turned an old running track into Preston Pirates BMX track. It used to regularly get taken over by the Pikeys who would stay for a while so they could dump their shit there whilst raising the crime rate around Preston, then move on. It has become very popular now, some riders have been targetted by British Cycling for the next Olympics. It does get used regularly, and appears very popular. 

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LetsBePartOfThe... replied to Rik Mayals underpants | 3 years ago
4 likes

Whatever your experiences and concerns, I'm surprised to see racist terms being used in polite conversation by civilised people

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hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
4 likes

Latent gophers?

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eburtthebike | 3 years ago
14 likes

Oh dear, they get subsidised by taxpayers but don't offer to pay enough to make the course profitable.  Why should other people pay for their game?

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jova54 | 3 years ago
5 likes

Perhaps if these "latent golfers" paid the correct price for their membership/rounds they would get to keep their facility.

How many cyclists could you get using a 200M+ fairway at the same time compared to golfers?

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Hirsute | 3 years ago
10 likes

39 clubs near bath https://en.leadingcourses.com/europe+united-kingdom+england+somerset/bat...

so hardly a lack of choice.

All local authorities are looking to cut spending, so it is no surprise that this non statutory service is looking to be cut.

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