council4_vaughan
Member
Now that we have a draft of the study, we have to decide what we are going to do with the information.
To summarize, the National Golf Foundation (NGF) seems to think our golf course is well run and doing better financially than most golf courses. It has some improvements that are needed to maximize revenue, for which NGF is concerned they will not be able to afford on their own (requiring a subsidy).
However, if we break down their numbers, I disagree with their conclusion. First we need to break down the financial projections they provide into operations and capital. On page 70/71 of their report, they have a 5 year financial projection that mixes the two together. If we take out the capital costs, add in the hotel tax to pay for their marketing (as we have traditionally done), and remove the venue tax, the financial results would be this:
As you can see, the golf course revenue covers its costs with a surplus in excess of $400k for years 2027-2029. This is without the venue tax.
NGF recommends capital improvements (primarily focused on the course) to increase play. Those improvements are somewhere between $3.278 million and $4.214 million per their estimates. But only $1.657 million to $2.034 million are high priority. If the golf revenues cover their operating costs, then we would need to discuss how to pay for these capital improvements. Below adds their available reserves from the 2024 audit to what NGF recommends they will generate above.
This means over 5 years, the golf course will have around $2.8 million available to it for capital costs. This would not cover all the capital improvements NGF has recommended but would cover all the high priority items and then some. Again, this is with no venue tax. This also assumes the golf course gets all the staff that NGF recommends they add.
Bottom line: NGF has given us a road map to remove the taxpayer subsidy from the golf course while still providing additional staffing and high priority capital items. The time to end subsidies for the golf course is now.
To summarize, the National Golf Foundation (NGF) seems to think our golf course is well run and doing better financially than most golf courses. It has some improvements that are needed to maximize revenue, for which NGF is concerned they will not be able to afford on their own (requiring a subsidy).
However, if we break down their numbers, I disagree with their conclusion. First we need to break down the financial projections they provide into operations and capital. On page 70/71 of their report, they have a 5 year financial projection that mixes the two together. If we take out the capital costs, add in the hotel tax to pay for their marketing (as we have traditionally done), and remove the venue tax, the financial results would be this:
As you can see, the golf course revenue covers its costs with a surplus in excess of $400k for years 2027-2029. This is without the venue tax.
NGF recommends capital improvements (primarily focused on the course) to increase play. Those improvements are somewhere between $3.278 million and $4.214 million per their estimates. But only $1.657 million to $2.034 million are high priority. If the golf revenues cover their operating costs, then we would need to discuss how to pay for these capital improvements. Below adds their available reserves from the 2024 audit to what NGF recommends they will generate above.
This means over 5 years, the golf course will have around $2.8 million available to it for capital costs. This would not cover all the capital improvements NGF has recommended but would cover all the high priority items and then some. Again, this is with no venue tax. This also assumes the golf course gets all the staff that NGF recommends they add.
Bottom line: NGF has given us a road map to remove the taxpayer subsidy from the golf course while still providing additional staffing and high priority capital items. The time to end subsidies for the golf course is now.