This Arizona casino and golf resort reinvented itself during the pandemic. Here’s the new look

Imagine stepping inside a cruise ship, but instead of ocean water, you’re surrounded by the Sonoran Desert.

Imagine stepping inside a cruise ship, but instead of ocean water, you’re surrounded by the Sonoran Desert.

We-Ko-Pa Casino Resort, about 30 miles northeast of central Phoenix on land owned by the Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation, is where this vision becomes reality as a reimagined one-stop vacation spot.

People who visited We-Ko-Pa before the pandemic will find a different, higher-end experience today, said Gail Manginelli, a spokeswoman for the resort.

“We have everything right here — fine dining, a casino, golf, outdoor activities and a spa,” she said. “And you feel like you’re away from it all, even though you’re close enough. All you see is desert.”

A reinvention and rebranding

The 166,341-square-foot casino resort, an AAA Four Diamond hotel, reinvented and rebranded itself upon the completion of a new, 100 percent smoke-free casino in October 2020. It replaced the original Fort McDowell Casino.

The resort closed in March 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but reopened in May, not long before its refresh was completed.

We-Ko-Pa Casino Resort
Slot machines at the Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation’s We-Ko-Pa Casino Resort in Fort McDowell, Arizona. (Photo: Joel Angel Juarez/The Arizona Republic)

The resort is across the street from the We-Ko-Pa Golf Club, which has two award-winning golf courses with desert and mountain views, and close to Fort McDowell Adventures, which hosts outdoor experiences like horseback tours and desert Segway tours.

We-Ko-Pa’s Saguaro course is the No. 1 public-access course in Arizona on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list and No. 6 on the casino list for the whole United States.

We-Ko-Pa resort, Fort McDowell Casino are now unified

Before the pandemic, the We-Ko-Pa hotel and Fort McDowell Casino operated as separate entities.

The casino opened in 1984 under the name Ba’Ja Bingo, Manginelli said. It was Arizona’s first casino.

The hotel opened in 2006 as the Radisson Fort McDowell Resort & Casino, then was renamed the We-Ko-Pa Resort & Conference Center in 2014, she said. The hotel has 246 rooms, 25,000 square feet of meeting space, two outdoor pools and a spa.

Unifying the hotel and casino enabled We-Ko-Pa to build “a more cohesive brand” and operate more efficiently, Manginelli said.

An upgraded, smoke-free new casino

Open 24 hours, We-Ko-Pa’s casino boasts more than 900 slot machines, a 400-seat bingo hall, and 16 blackjack tables.

In the last 12 months, the casino introduced new gaming options including new craps and roulette table games and eight sports betting kiosks.

A key difference from the old casino is how the new one opened as a smoke-free venue, said Christi Windle, We-Ko-Pa’s director of sales.

“No one has ever smoked in it,” she said. “With other casinos, even if it’s smoke-free, you can still have lingering smoke (from when smoking was allowed).”

Where to eat at We-Ko-Pa Casino Resort

One of the most prominent additions to We-Ko-Pa since its rebranding is Ember, a fine dining restaurant specializing in steaks and seafood. It has attracted high interest among visitors and received high-profile recognition.

“It really is a freestanding destination,” Windle said. “Some people come just for the restaurant.”

We-Ko-Pa Casino Resort
The Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation’s We-Ko-Pa Casino Resort in Fort McDowell, Arizona. (Photo: Joel Angel Juarez/The Arizona Republic)

OpenTable recognized Ember in its 2022 Diner’s Choice awards as one of the 10 Arizona restaurants with the best service.

Ember’s wine selection encompasses 22 countries with 800 wines by the bottle and 26 wines by the glass. These include 32 wines that scored a perfect 100 points on Wine Spectator’s world’s best wine lists.

Wine Spectator recently honored Ember for outstanding wine curation. The resort said on July 25 that Ember received the magazine’s 2022 Best of Award of Excellence.

Ember also received this recognition in 2021.

“That we won this award two years in a row – which also happens to be how long Ember has been open – is a testament to our entire staff’s commitment to excellence,” Zac Gallo, We-Ko-Pa’s executive director of food and beverage, said in a statement.

Ember isn’t the only place to eat at We-Ko-Pa. Other restaurants include:

  • WKP Sports & Entertainment, which serves pub food and craft beer and hosts live music and sports betting.The Market, a quick-serve restaurant with on-the-go options, open 24 hours a day.
  • The Dining Studio, with two all-you-can-eat restaurants in one: Las Tapas, which serves Mexican food, and Dragon Wok & Noodle, which serves Asian food.
  • Ahnala, a breakfast and lunch spot specializing in American comfort food.

What’s next for We-Ko-Pa

The rebranding and enhancements to the guest experience – right down to the Native American design elements in the lobby – were intended to reimagine We-Ko-Pa as a must-visit destination.

And there’s still more to come. The poolside cabanas will be upgraded to “super deluxe,” each with its own TV and refrigerator.

The new cabanas were supposed to debut in May, but supply chain disruptions delayed completion, Windle said.

Occupancy at We-Ko-Pa is up

The result of We-Ko-Pa’s work is an occupancy rate that staff said is “well exceeding” pre-pandemic levels.

“Everybody’s just super excited to come out and have an experience,” Windle said.

Business travel is still overcoming pandemic-era challenges nationwide and in the Phoenix area, but We-Ko-Pa’s business from groups is strong going into 2023.

We-Ko-Pa Casino Resort
A view of the pool at the Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation’s We-Ko-Pa Casino Resort in Fort McDowell, Arizona. (Photo: Joel Angel Juarez/The Arizona Republic)

Staff attributed this in part to upcoming events like the Super Bowl and the WM Phoenix Open.

“(Travelers are) wanting it to be 2019,” Windle said. “They give me three to four dates and we’re all booked.”

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Arizona golf courses use more water than they’re supposed to. Nothing is stopping them.

A large number of Arizona golf courses have repeatedly exceeded state assigned water allotments.

The Scottsdale National Golf Club — an exclusive resort in the Sonoran Desert where 145 members pay $300,000 to join and $60,000 in annual fees — brags about wide open fairways, stunning vistas and “unexpected amenities.”

One thing the club doesn’t like to talk about is how much water it uses to keep its 45 holes of golf emerald green.

According to the Arizona Department of Water Resources, Scottsdale National has expended more than twice as much water as allotted by the state since 2016, with every drop coming from the overextended Colorado River.

When asked for an explanation, a representative from the club declined to comment.

“At this time, Scottsdale National is not interested in participating in your story,” the representative said.

With global warming and a historical megadrought combining to constrain Arizona’s water supply and triggering shortage declarations, golf courses in Arizona have long claimed that they’re part of the solution — often lauding themselves as national leaders in water conservation.

The Arizona Republic found otherwise.

Not only have Arizona golf courses collectively failed to reduce water consumption over the past 20 years, but a large number have repeatedly exceeded state assigned allotments and there have been no serious consequences for them in doing so.

The Arizona Department of Water Resources, still chronically understaffed and underfunded since the 2008 recession, tries to work with golf courses to save water rather than levying fines and fees, but its approach has failed to rein in usage. And thus far, its efforts to cut water allotments by 3.1 percent have been met with stiff golf industry resistance.

The Republic spent two months investigating water consumption by Arizona’s golf courses. The research was based primarily on data provided by the Department of Water Resources that measured golf course water usage from 2002 through 2020. The Republic also questioned experts about the data and reviewed dozens of additional water reports to obtain information missing from the department’s datasets.

From this, The Republic found:

During the past two decades, 30 to 50 percent of Arizona golf courses have exceeded their water allotments each year. One-third have gone over their state-assigned allotments at least 10 times since 2002. One golf club in an Arizona retirement community, which exceeded its allotment for 16 consecutive years, used 157 percent more water than permitted. Its overconsumption could have supplied 39,000 single-family homes for a year.

Despite repeated claims of progress and labeling itself as an innovative leader in sustainability, the golf industry in Arizona has made no progress in reducing its water usage over the past two decades. The share of golf courses relying on reclaimed or recycled water — as opposed to more precious groundwater or Colorado River water — is the same as it was in 2006.

The Republic reached out to 30 golf courses to explain their usage. That included 24 golf courses that are known to waste water as well as six golf courses that have indicated a reduction in water usage. The vast majority either failed to respond or said they didn’t want to participate in the story. Only five golf courses provided any answers.

The Arizona Department of Water Resources has limited tools to reduce the water consumption of golf courses. Its authority to pursue enforcement is restricted to golf courses that use groundwater — slightly more than half of all golf courses in Arizona. That means many golf courses in Arizona can exceed their allotments without any legal consequence, while even those that use groundwater don’t face stiff punishments. The agency says it “views compliance as a tool to conserve water — not as a punitive process.” The Department of Water Resources has filed stipulation and consent orders against only two Arizona golf courses over the past 20 years.

“ADWR has a lot on their plate and they are chronically underfunded,” explained Susan M. Craig, a water policy analyst for Arizona State University’s Kyl Center for Water Policy who researches the water use of golf courses. “As far as I understand, very little happens with the golf courses that exceed their allotments. And ADWR definitely knows it’s a problem.”

To be sure, there are multiple golf courses in Arizona that have reduced water consumption. Some decreased turf area by desert-scaping or xeriscaping, while others modernized aging irrigation systems and removed leaking ponds. But there are not enough to tip the scale.

Arizona Grand Golf Course in Phoenix. (Photo: Mark Henle/The Arizona Republic)

Representatives from Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey’s office initially challenged The Republic’s findings, saying that only 11 percent of Arizona golf courses exceeded allotments and were out of compliance each year. But that number was derived by dividing golf courses that exceeded groundwater allotments by every golf course in Arizona no matter whether they used groundwater or water from the Colorado River, Arizona rivers or reclaimed sources.

The Department of Water Resources said that if only golf courses that use groundwater are considered in the equation, the percent that exceed their allotments and were out of compliance each year for the past 20 years would be 20 percent.

That means those golf courses not only used more water than they were allowed, but they also fell out of compliance with the department’s flex balance accounts, which allow them to exceed their allotments by as much as 20 percent in one year as long as they make up for the excess usage the following year.

Meanwhile, industry representatives have defended themselves over and over against charges of excessive water usage by claiming that Arizona golf courses use only 2 percent of the state’s water, while contributing $4.6 billion to the economy.

But the data provided by the Department of Water Resources unequivocally shows that the industry is not using any less water than it did 20 years ago. And even the industry’s oft-repeated claims are misleading.

While Arizona golf courses only use 2 percent of the state’s water, they use 9 percent of water consumed in municipal areas. And though $4.6 billion is a lot of money, it represented just 1.2 percent of Arizona’s economy in 2019.

The Arizona Alliance for Golf and the Arizona Golf Association were silent when asked for a comment about these and other numbers. Neither organization replied to emails from The Republic.

‘Newly planted desert landscaping’

Sun City sits on the outskirts of Phoenix – a retirement community of 40,000.

Developed in the 1960s, it caters to active retirees. The focal point of the development is golf. Eight of the courses are run by the Recreation Centers of Sun City, and all but one have exceeded their water allotments at least six times since 2002.

By far the worst offender is Lakes East Golf Course, an 18-hole executive course that used more water than it was allowed for 16 consecutive years between 2002 and 2017.

Contacted by The Republic, the communications coordinator for the Recreation Centers of Sun City declined to comment.

“We are not speaking to the press regarding this subject,” she said.

But the story of Lakes East Golf Course is not all about wasting water.

From 2008 through 2014, the course exceeded its allotment by almost 250 percent. The data shows it hosed down its fairways and greens with 9,000 acre-feet above its permitted amount — enough water to supply 27,000 single-family homes for a year.

After 2014, however, Lakes East turned down the spigot. In recent years, it has been using less than its state allowance. The reduction, according to Lakes East’s website, was due to “newly planted desert landscaping that features many low-water-use plants”.

Despite this marked improvement at Lakes East, two of Sun City’s courses were still using more water than permitted, according to the most recent data available from 2020.

‘Innovative leader in sustainability’

The Arizona Alliance for Golf, which welcomed Gov. Ducey as its speaker at a kickoff event last April, states on its website that the golf industry “has long been an innovating leader in sustainability.” It also says the Arizona golf industry is known for “pioneering nationally recognized best practices for wise water management.”

But the Alliance for Golf, which did not return an email with questions from The Republic, provides little evidence on its website regarding what the Arizona golf industry has done over the years to conserve water, saying only that golf courses account for just 2 percent of Arizona’s total water usage.

Other articles on the site point to Arizona’s reservoirs and reclaimed water as potential sources that can make up for any reductions imposed due to declining levels of the Colorado River.

But data provided by the Department of Water Resources show there has been no collective conservation of water by Arizona golf courses between 2002 and 2020 despite repeated claims to the contrary from the industry.

According to the Arizona Department of Water Resources, Arizona golf courses consumed about 120,000 to 130,000 acre-feet almost every year during the period. The data is not complete, though. Each year, some golf courses did not report. About 7 percent of the golf courses’ water use is missing from the database.

In populated, mostly urban parts of Arizona — known as “active-management areas” — golf courses consumed around 3 percent of Arizona’s water in 2002.

While overall water consumption in Arizona’s active-management areas decreased slightly during the ensuing years, golf courses’ share of total consumption grew by roughly 10 percent.

By 2020, golf courses were using around 3.3 percent of all water in active management areas.

The golf industry’s water consumption has special relevance today because the Department of Water Resources is trying to set delayed allotment targets for 2020 through 2025.

The Active Management Areas were created by Arizona’s landmark Groundwater Management Act in 1980, which “recognized the need to aggressively manage the state’s finite groundwater resources.” It also established the Department of Water Resources, which developed management plans that regulate water consumption of golf courses by setting allotments.

The most current draft of the department’s allotment plan was published in January and officials expect to complete the process by the end of 2022.

As The Republic reported in summer 2021, managers of some Arizona golf courses were opposed to the Department of Water Resources’ proposal to cut combined water use for Phoenix-area golf courses by 3.1 percent.

In five public meetings between June 2020 and August 2021, golf course managers pushed back against the planned cuts, claiming that Arizona’s golf industry is a national leader in water conservation.

Golf courses “have already done more than most industries have already done,” argued Mark Woodward, president of Arizona’s Cactus and Pine Golf Course Superintendents Association. They are “way ahead of the curve.”

The pushback has been successful.

In the initial proposal, Arizona courses were expected to reduce water use by 3.1 percent, and by the final meeting in August, that number was cut to 1.3 percent.

But while golf courses negotiated successfully, their rhetoric failed to match reality.

Based on Arizona Department of Water Resources data, the average golf course in Arizona used more water in 2020 than in any year since 2003.

What’s more, at least 30 percent of golf courses have exceeded their water allotments every year since 2002. And in some years — including 2017 and 2020 — the share of courses overconsuming reached as high as 48 percent.

All told, 86 of Arizona’s more than 200 golf courses have exceeded their allotments at least ten times since 2002. In a typical year, the collective overconsumption has totaled around 15,000 acre-feet — enough to sustain 45,000 single-family homes for a year. That usage is five times greater than all the water in Tempe Town Lake.

‘Not a punitive process’

The Department of Water Resources sets water allotments for all golf courses, but it only has authority to take action against golf courses that use groundwater.

Consider the 36-hole Anthem Golf and Country Club about 30 miles north of Phoenix.

Anthem has exceeded its water allotment for the last four years, according to Department of Water Resources data. And in 2020, it exceeded its allotment by 30 percent. But since Anthem doesn’t use groundwater, it has faced no consequences.

“I’m not aware of any penalty that was issued to the club regarding this,” said Brad Harrington, Anthem’s general manager in his response to questions from The Republic.

According to Department of Water Resources, 41 percent of Arizona’s water is derived from groundwater which is declining in many areas beneath growing cities and suburbs. Another 36 percent comes from the Colorado River, whose reservoirs reached historical lows due to the ongoing megadrought.

The rest of Arizona’s water comes from instate rivers and from reclaimed water.

The department focuses on protecting groundwater because it is not a renewable resource.

“There is a vast amount of groundwater below us, but every drop of fossil groundwater that you pump out of a well, unless you replenish it through aquifer recharge, it’s gone forever and it won’t be available for future generations,” said Kathryn Sorensen, research director at ASU’s Kyl Center.

Golf courses that use no groundwater can exceed their allotments without any consequences, because “the idea was to create an incentive to use reclaimed water,” Sorensen explained.

But the supply of reclaimed water has been limited.

Though the share of golf courses using reclaimed wastewater increased through 2009, it has fluctuated since then. In 2020, the share of the golf courses using effluent water was 37 percent – the same as in 2006.

When the 1980 groundwater rules were created, golf courses were required to move toward using reclaimed water, according to Cynthia Campbell, water resource management adviser for the city of Phoenix.

“Many did and some of them have actually built some of the infrastructure for us and paid for it,” Campbell said. “However, at this point, based on what we have seen in Phoenix, there are limited reclaimed supplies available for golf course use.”

Meanwhile, golf courses that are dependent on groundwater have had trouble staying within their allotments.

Since 2002, at least 25 percent of groundwater users have exceeded their allotments every year.

Sixty-seven golf courses exceeded their groundwater allotments at least five times between 2002 and 2020.

And in 2020, 45 percent of golf courses that depend on groundwater exceeded their allotments.

As to the reasons: the biggest wasters aren’t talking.

The Republic reached out to 16 golf courses that exceeded their groundwater allotments according to Department of Water Resources data. Only two responded.

McCormick Ranch, a golf club in Scottsdale, argued that Arizona Department of Water Resources’ data is misleading. A spokesperson for the club said it sells around 10 percent of its water to a homeowner’s association and thus stays within its allotments.

The other facility, Sun Lakes Country Club, located at a retirement community in the outskirts of Phoenix, stated in an email that “our records don’t match yours.” But the club didn’t share its numbers despite repeated requests. Sun Lakes added that it has an additional allocation that was missing from the database and was confirmed by the Department of Water Resources.

But even with the additional allocation, Sun Lakes has exceeded its allotment and been out of compliance in all but one year since 2002, according to Arizona Department of Water Resources. That means it could have been punished.

However, the golf course said it is “not aware of any penalties.”

Like Sun Lakes, almost all Arizona golf clubs that continuously exceeded their allotments have avoided any serious consequences.

The Department of Water Resources has only filed stipulation and consent orders against Arizona golf courses twice in the past 20 years, according to documents obtained by The Republic.

In December 2002, Gainey Ranch Golf Club agreed to pay $30,000 after withdrawing “groundwater in excess of its legal authority.”

Eleven years later, the Recreation Centers of Sun City agreed to replace irrigation systems and implement a water education program at Lakes East Golf Course.

The fact that the department has not resorted to more punishment is not surprising given that its stated goal is to collaborate with golf courses to save water rather than to levy fines. But that policy has not kept golf courses from exceeding their allotments.

“It is interesting that we are proud of how progressive we are with our legislation, but we don’t back that up with enforcement,” said Sorensen, the Kyl Center research director who spent years as director of Phoenix Water Services.

Experts suggested that golf courses may be getting away with overuse of water in Arizona because the Department of Water Resources doesn’t have the money and personnel to pursue them.

“ADWR is chronically understaffed,” said Campbell, the water resource management adviser for the Phoenix. “They have not kept up with water management plans and the adjudication of surface water rights has been slowed by the lack of staff support. There are probably about 5-6 other things that they are responsible for, but they are behind on doing, because they lack the staff to do it.”

According to Campbell, “the problem started” in the Great Recession in 2008 when “the state let go a whole lot of people.”

The department’s annual budgets and staff numbers confirm that the water authority has not regained its pre-2009 size despite rapid population growth and the nagging water crisis. Data show that the operating budgets were larger at the beginning of the 2000s even without considering inflation. And there are nearly 40 percent fewer people working for The water department now than at the peak year in 2009.

But both the department and Gov. Ducey’s office point out that the Department of Water Resources’ budget and the number of employees have climbed since 2015 and they insist the department is no longer understaffed.

“The Department will continue to do their due diligence in bringing golf courses to compliance with the staff they have,” said Morgan Carr, the deputy communications director for Gov. Ducey. She added that “from a water management perspective: It is more important to bring a water user into compliance than to collect fines.”

Meanwhile, some golf courses in Arizona are making conservation improvements without having to be forced.

Both Camelback Golf Club and Moon Valley Country Club fall into that category.

Other golf clubs just appear to have saved water.

Ahwatukee Country Club – located just minutes from Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport – has always operated within its allotment. But after 2013, its water usage declined by 45 percent and it has remained way below its allotment ever since.

The general manager of the golf course said the reduction has nothing to do with water conservation.

“We had two golf courses, but we closed one of them around eight years ago, but actually, we are about to reopen it,” explained Terry Duggan. “If you look at how much water usage we have, it looks like we are way down, but unfortunately, it’s gonna go back up quite a bit.”

Balint Fabok is a Fulbright Hubert H. Humphrey Fellow from Budapest, Hungary, who spent a year in the United States studying at the Arizona State University’s Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication. This story was reported with oversight by The Arizona Republic’s data & investigative team and edited by Republic Investigations Editor Michael Braga. The Arizona Republic and Golfweek are part of the USA TODAY Network.

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Wigwam Red Course in Arizona slated for four-month bunker renovation

Capillary Concrete systems should improve playing conditions in the bunkers of the Phoenix-area Red Course.

Wigwam Golf Club in Litchfield Park, Arizona, will begin a four-month bunker renovation on its Red Course starting on July 5. The layout is scheduled to remain open through the summer as work is completed, and it will be temporarily closed for seasonal overseeding in late September.

The Red is one of three courses at the public-access Wigwam, which operates three courses and a resort just west of Phoenix. Originally named the West Course when it opened in 1974, it was renamed in the late 1980s in honor of two men: the club’s longtime professional, V.O. “Red” Allen, and the course’s architect, Robert “Red” Lawrence. The other two courses at Wigwam, the Gold and the Blue, were designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr.

The bunker work to the Red, set to wrap up in October, will be a collaboration by Pro Turf International and Wigwam ownership group JDM Partners. The 44 fairway and greenside bunkers will be excavated and rebuilt with Capillary Concrete, a system that controls water flow through the base of the sand and minimizes washouts. The course’s current tan sand will be replaced with white sand.

Wigwam did similar work on its Blue Course in 2016 and its Gold Course in 2015.

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Watch: Bobcat hunts down duck on Arizona golf course

A hungry bobcat wasn’t going to let a few golfers interrupt mealtime at Silverleaf Country Club in Scottsdale.

A hungry bobcat wasn’t going to let a few golfers interrupt mealtime.

At Silverleaf Country Club in Scottsdale, Arizona, last week, a group of golfers were playing the 15th hole and as they approached the green, noticed a bobcat enter a sand trap to start stalking a team of ducks.

The bobcat was able to hide behind the high side of the bunker, going back and forth in a crouched walk, waiting for the perfect moment to make a move.

And when it was go time, this bobcat went. The ducks quickly got airborne to escape but one wasn’t so lucky. In the video, you can see the bobcat and its prey just before scampering off.

Here’s how a golf-club maker — one of many — flourished amid the COVID pandemic

Parsons Xtreme Golf, or PXG, got a couple favorable breaks from the pandemic.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Tens of thousands of small businesses have struggled over the past year and a half amid COVID-19 infections and disruptions to the economy. But the pandemic has allowed a Scottsdale-based golf-club manufacturer to tee up its growth prospects.

Parsons Xtreme Golf, or PXG, got a couple favorable breaks from the pandemic.

For starters, golf participation and revenue expanded as courses around the nation were allowed to stay open. In addition, the company, which connects with consumers directly, was able to stay open and keep revenues flowing in because it didn’t need to rely on sales through third-party stores, many of which had to close temporarily.

The company, which is owned by GoDaddy founder and Arizona billionaire Bob Parsons, has ramped up sales and employment and expanded its marketing reach. It opened its fourth Arizona store and 10th overall Nov. 17 at the Norterra shopping center in north Phoenix, which Parsons’ Yam Worldwide also owns. PXG plans to have two dozen stores nationally by the end of 2022.

Parsons, a self-described “golf nut” with a 12 handicap, got interested in the game as a kid in Baltimore. He gained more enthusiasm after serving with the military in Vietnam, later completing his college education and founding several companies, of which GoDaddy is the most prominent.

The technology of golf

As Parsons grew wealthier, he spent more money on the pastime, eventually hitting what he said were $300,000 in annual expenditures on golf clubs and other equipment. He became obsessed with technological improvements that could allow players to hit farther, straighter and better. That resulted in his founding of PXG in 2014.

The company now has about 650 employees in Arizona, including roughly 340 hired this year. PXG has substantially increased sales, Parsons said, though the private company doesn’t disclose financial figures. It holds nearly 550 global patents, mainly for club design.

PXG 0311
The PXG 0311 club heads are hollow and filled with a gel that the company says improves sound and feel. Photo by PXG

“The whole idea was that we could make a better club,” Parsons said during an interview prior to a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new Arizona store.

“If you had unlimited time and money, could you make a better club?” Parsons said. “Absolutely.”

The importance of swing analysis

PXG stores sell clubs, clothing and other equipment. They also have rooms with golf simulators where players can test clubs and have their swings analyzed by experts and computers. In addition, PXG hosts club testing and swing-analyzing events or “fittings” at driving ranges and elsewhere. Fitting sessions evaluate a player’s swing speed and angle and other aspects in the hopes of recommending the most suitable clubs.

“Nothing is sold off the shelf,” Parsons said.

Jeremy Knowles, part-owner of the 500 Club Golf Course in Glendale, Arizona, aid fitting sessions where PXG representatives allow golfers to try clubs and have their swings analyzed have proven popular.

Knowles said he recently bought a set of PXG clubs himself. “The feel of them is fantastic,” he said. “And the sound of the driver and the yardage are very good.”

Prices range from $89 for a single less-expensive club to $2,999 for a set of higher-end clubs, with products suitable for beginners to advanced players. PXG stores also sell hats, golf attire, club bags and other items. Discounts are offered to first responders and veterans.

Skirting supply chain disruptions

PXG clubs are manufactured in Asia and elsewhere, but otherwise PXG is an American company, with engineering, product development, marketing and other operations here. Because PXG remained open throughout the pandemic, it didn’t face supply chain disruptions to the extent competitors did, Parsons said.

“All of our competitors marketed through big stores,” he said. “During COVID, they shut down but we stayed open.”

Parsons has stepped around concerns about COVID-19 vaccinations with a new policy offering a $1,000 payment to any staff member willing to get the shots.

Bob Parsons
Bob Parsons of Parsons Xtreme Golf (PXG) at his private club, Scottsdale National, in 2015. Photo by Tracy Wilcox/Golfweek

“For employees who already did it, it was free money for them,” Parsons said.

For others who were on the fence, the $1,000 bonus was an incentive to follow through with vaccinations.

And for those who remain reluctant for religious or other reasons, the policy has been popular “because it allows them to make their own decisions,” he added.

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Some Arizona golf courses are pushing back against state’s plan to reduce water use

Golf courses are pushing back against a proposal by state officials that would reduce overall water use on courses.

PHOENIX — Managers of some Arizona golf courses are fighting a plan that would cut water use at a time when the state is being forced to confront shrinking water supplies.

A group representing golf courses has been pushing back against a proposal by state officials that would reduce overall water use on courses, instead offering a plan that would entail less conservation.

Opposition to the state’s proposal for golf courses has emerged over the past several months, aired in sometimes-tense virtual meetings where representatives of courses have said they understand the need to conserve but are concerned the proposed reductions in water allotments would damage their businesses.

The latest proposal by the Arizona Department of Water Resources would require Phoenix-area golf courses that use groundwater to reduce their total combined water use by 3.1 percent compared to current allotments under a previous plan.

Representatives of a newly formed group called the Arizona Alliance for Golf opposed those reductions and offered a counterproposal that, based on the state’s analysis, would decrease water use on courses that pump groundwater by 1.8 percent.

The group’s attempts to assert its position have included repeated meetings with state officials, the launch of a new website urging people to “speak up for Arizona golf,” and emails seeking to recruit more members to “have a united voice” and “protect our game.” The group also welcomed Gov. Doug Ducey as their featured speaker at a kick-off event in April.

The resistance from the golf industry has surfaced as Arizona’s water outlook has grown increasingly complicated, with a shortage looming on the Colorado River and groundwater declining in many areas beneath growing cities and suburbs.

The disagreement shows that even a modest plan for using less water can generate considerable opposition from some in the golf business, and it also indicates state water regulators may continue to grapple with resistance — even in the face of severe drought and the effects of climate change — as they seek to implement requirements of the 1980 law that regulates groundwater in parts of Arizona.

“I’m astounded that we are 40 years into the Groundwater Management Act and we are still arguing about whether the department can, in fact, impose minor conservation requirements on golf courses,” said Kathleen Ferris, a water researcher and lawyer who previously headed the state Department of Water Resources.

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Ferris said she understands that a number of golf courses aren’t fighting the water-saving proposal and are “really trying to figure out what it is DWR needs them to do and how they can comply with reductions in their water use.”

State records show there are 165 golf courses in the Phoenix area. They use various sources of water, including treated wastewater and Colorado River water. But more than half of the area’s courses rely at least partially on groundwater, together pumping roughly as much from wells as the average consumption of 130,000 single-family homes.

As state officials finish drafting their plan for reductions in water use on golf courses in the coming months, the allotments that are established will affect how much water is sprayed on courses in the desert for years to come.

“We need to increase our conservation and decrease our groundwater withdrawals,” said Tom Buschatzke, director of the Arizona Department of Water Resources, speaking at an April 28 online meeting attended by more than 400 people.

It was the latest public meeting between state water officials and golf course managers, and one in a series of state-convened work groups focused on developing updated groundwater plans — technically called the fifth management plans — for the five “active-management areas” where pumping is regulated around Phoenix, Tucson and Prescott as well as Santa Cruz and Pinal counties.

Shrinking supplies drive water-saving needs

Buschatzke began with an overview of Arizona’s worsening water challenges, including the declining reservoirs of the Colorado River, which store water that flows through the Central Arizona Project Canal to desert cities from Scottsdale to Tucson.

“I wanted to give you the context of what’s happening, challenges that are facing our state with the management of the Colorado River,” Buschatzke said.

He showed a chart tracing the declining water levels in Lake Mead since 2000, a blue line descending like a mountain slope toward a threshold that will soon trigger an official shortage declaration by the federal government.

“Unfortunately, Lake Mead and the Colorado River keep declining. We’re on the verge of taking very large reductions in our Colorado River water use starting in 2022,” Buschatzke said.

The watershed is trending, he said, and Lake Mead’s levels could continue to drop toward lower thresholds that would bring bigger cuts for Arizona, Nevada and Mexico — and potentially for California if the reservoir keeps declining.

Other slides detailed the cutbacks that would be required if the reservoir falls toward critically low levels, something a 2019 deal among the states aimed to avert. Buschatzke also described a worst-case scenario.

“At dead pool, 890 feet elevation, no water moves past Hoover Dam. No water. The river will be dry and Arizona will not have any Colorado River water,” Buschatzke said. These larger challenges with the river, he said, relate to the conservation that’s needed under the new management plans in all sectors, including golf.

Other details about the water plans were explained by Natalie Mast, the department’s director of active-management areas, who said the guiding purpose in each successive plan is to achieve reductions in groundwater pumping. She gave a recap of previous meetings since 2019 and said time is tight to finish developing the plans.

“We’re kind of in a red zone here. We’re pushing the limits of our timeline in order to complete the drafting of those fifth management plans,” Mast said. “We do need to work through the finalization of these programs in a relatively quick manner.”

The presenters from the state water agency went over their proposal, an earlier iteration of which they floated in February. The compared their proposal with the different plan presented by the Arizona Alliance for Golf.

Phoenix
The Central Arizona Project canal winds through the city of Phoenix. Photo by David Wallace/The Arizona Republic

They also delved into complex details about how the plan would work. For one thing, the changes in water allocations wouldn’t be the same for all golf courses. Under the state’s proposal, the changes in allocations would vary widely depending on the course. Examples listed in the proposal show that some large courses might face a reduction of as much as 24 percent in their allotment, while other courses would have smaller reductions, such as 8 percent or 11 percent, and some courses would actually see their allotments increased.

State officials said their goals, in addition to reducing the amount of groundwater pumped, include improving the “simplicity” of the system of water allotments and achieving “equity” among golf courses, recognizing that some have made more progress than others in becoming more efficient.

The reductions in allotments apply to all courses that use groundwater, some of which also use water from other sources. The analysis by the Department of Water Resources showed its proposal would mean an overall decrease of 1.3 percent in the aggregate water allotments of all golf courses in the Phoenix area. In contrast, state officials found that the alliance’s proposal would slightly increase the combined water allotments of all courses by 0.1 percent compared to the last management plan.

Buschatzke said representatives of the Arizona Alliance for Golf asked to meet with his department in November, and they’ve had 11 meetings, five of which he attended.

However, Buschatzke said, the golf alliance’s latest proposal wouldn’t satisfy the goal of reducing water use and “is not something that meets our requirements.”

He said the state is proposing “small reductions,” and added that he thinks “it should be as much as we can achieve under the golf program given all that is happening with our water supplies.”

‘Fundamental disagreements’

Then representatives of the Arizona Alliance for Golf spoke.

The group was formed “to bring unity and cohesion to these really important conversations,” said Katie Prendergast of the public relations firm Horizon Strategies. The meetings between the group and the department in recent months have aimed at finding a “workable proposal,” she said, “one that provides the water necessary for courses to remain economically viable while enabling the department to meet its statutory requirement.”

“Based on today’s presentation, we don’t have the same perspective as the department and there are clearly gaps we need to work through,” Prendergast said.

Also speaking for the alliance, Rob Collins of Paradise Valley Country Club touted the golf industry’s efforts to conserve.

“Water is expensive, so it’s critical to our businesses and it’s a major expense,” Collins said. “We are naturally water-savers.”

Collins said he thinks it would be better to “look at real-use numbers rather than being focused on plan-to-plan reductions,” as the state agency is doing.

Bri Kenny of the Scottsdale-based golf management company Troon said she thinks “it’s super necessary that we have another meeting.”

“We do have fundamental disagreements on these plans,” Kenny said. “And it actually stems back to the approach in calculating reductions and the quality of the data that exist, that you’re calculating the reductions from.”

Buschatzke said he and his staff are open to having another meeting.

“Remember, when you talk about the data that we’re using, this is data that is reported by the golf courses, by the golf industry to us, as is required under the law,” Buschatzke said. “We’re relying on the accuracy of the data you’re providing to us in your annual reports. So if there are ways you can make that data more accurate, we would encourage you to do so.”

Buschatzke reiterated that his agency is required to calculate these allotments to achieve reductions in groundwater use.

The Arizona Alliance for Golf says on its website that golf “is a driving force behind the state’s real estate and tourism industries, accounting for thousands of jobs and at least $4.6 billion in direct economic impact each year.” The group also says Arizona’s golf industry is a national leader in water conservation and “must be part of both the conversation and the solution” as state officials debate the future of water use.

Mark Woodward raised those points during the meeting. Woodward, president of Arizona’s Cactus and Pine Golf Course Superintendents Association, said he’s been in the business 52 years and the groundwater management plan that’s being discussed is “the biggest issue we’ve ever faced.”

“Rushing any decisions related to the plan would not be good for the industry. It would not be good for the department or anything. It’s critical that we get these decisions right,” Woodward said. “Because potentially any decisions you guys make are going to be impactful to the golf industry for the next 10 years or more.”

Woodward said more time is needed to “clean up the data” and the department should consider “the big picture, to look at the return on investment that golf brings for the small amount of water that we use — less than 2 percent of the state’s water supply.”

He also urged state officials to consider the progress golf courses have already made over the past 30 to 40 years in reducing water use.

“In many cases, there’s not a lot of room for improvement. We’ve already done more than most industries have already done. So we’re way ahead of the curve,” Woodward said.

“Let’s work together to ensure that decisions are well thought out and they accomplish all the goals of the department,” Woodward said. “You have goals. We understand that. But we also have an industry to run and we don’t want to do anything that’s going to jeopardize that industry, and I don’t think the governor or anybody wants to do that, frankly.”

Woodward said he and others in the golf industry also have questions about how the department is developing its proposals.

“It is the most critical thing that has happened in the last 50 years in this industry,” Woodward said. “We fully understand the need to operate efficiently and effectively, and use water wisely. We’ve been doing that for years. This is nothing new to us. We have a shared goal with you all: savings of groundwater. We understand that you have a goal to reach. We get that. But not at the expense of damaging an industry.”

Many golf courses use groundwater

Buschatzke replied that he and his staff “recognize the need to have a program that allows the golf industry to continue to move forward.” He said they’ll continue to accept comments about any of the proposals.

“But everyone needs to understand as well that we are under a deadline,” Buschatzke said. “We need to move forward and come to some closure very soon.”

More than two years ago, he noted, the state’s Auditor General pointed out the department was behind schedule on the groundwater management plans and said it needed to catch up. The agency’s regulators are now trying to wrap up a draft proposal for golf water allotments this year.

To examine water consumption on golf courses, The Arizona Republic requested data from the Department of Water Resources under the state’s public records law. The records show 219 golf courses across Arizona used a total of 119,478 acre-feet of water in 2019. The average amount of water used per course was 504 acre-feet during the year, or about 450,000 gallons a day.

More than half of the golf courses pump groundwater, which accounted for about 46 percent of all golf water use in 2019. Treated effluent from wastewater plants accounted for 27 percent of water use, while about 15 percent was Colorado River water from the CAP Canal. The remainder came from other sources.

A majority of the courses, 165 in all, are located in the Phoenix active-management area. The state data shows 89 of these courses rely at least partially on groundwater. During 2019, the records show, they pumped 44,354 acre-feet of groundwater, or 14.4 billion gallons, about as much water as 130,000 typical single-family households.

During the meeting, Buschatzke said his department is proposing a small overall reduction in groundwater use “because we do recognize much of what’s already been done in the golf industry with efficiencies, with how well the water is managed, and that some turf has already been reduced.”

Courses that are entirely reliant on surface water or recycled water don’t fall under the requirements of the groundwater law. “But if you have one molecule of groundwater in what you put on the golf course, you then are subject to penalty if you exceed your allotment,” Buschatzke said.

And while some courses face larger reductions than others, Buschatzke said, the overarching goal is to reduce water use industry-wide.

Some golf managers asked whether there will be a grace period to take out grass on portions of their courses. Others voiced specific concerns about how their courses and country clubs will fare.

Jan Ek, general manager of the Recreation Centers of Sun City, said she oversees seven large 18-hole courses that were built in the 1960s and ’70s, plus one 9-hole course.

“In most cases, we are over allocations on every golf course. It was built with wall-to-wall green,” Ek said.

She said they’ve been switching to more efficient irrigation systems and converting some areas to desert landscaping, and have also asked their board to approve spending more on grass removal. Ek said they have removed turf on about 60 acres so far, but “we’ve got a long ways to go.”

The new management plan is “beyond scary, because I don’t even know how we could possibly get there,” Ek said. She said she’s also looking at the expense of fixing a leaking lake, making for a list of projects that need to be addressed. And reducing water use on the scale proposed, she said, will be a “huge undertaking.”

And then there’s the size of the golf courses, she said, “because I have courses that are so large they could be two golf courses.”

Ek said she wants to get her courses into compliance with the water allotments. She asked Buschatzke if they could meet with him or his staff to go over a plan that would move toward the goal and still be affordable.

“Absolutely, we would be willing to sit down and work with you on a plan. I can’t guarantee what the result would be,” Buschatzke said. “And if there’s a mechanism to come to a legally binding agreement in that regard, we’re willing to talk about that with you as well.”

“That would be excellent,” Ek said. “We would very much appreciate that opportunity and, you know, ability to negotiate if we need to, to get ourselves to that point.”

Grappling with a ‘drier future’

One subject that came up only once during the meeting was climate change, when Buschatzke briefly uttered the words and referred to the “long-term effects finally hitting us from the drier future.”

But no one mentioned the fact that when it’s hotter and drier, as it has been recently, plants consume more water through evapotranspiration — something golf specialists track on their computer screens with sophisticated systems that pinpoint the irrigation demands on their greens and fairways.

And climate data from the federal government shows the Southwest has grown significantly hotter over the past decade, experiencing more pronounced warming than other regions of the country, which affects the amount of water needed per acre of green grass in the desert. In other words, at a time when golf courses are being asked to conserve more, hotter average temperatures are gradually pushing per-acre water demands higher.

At the same time, scientists have found that the Colorado River watershed is sensitive to warming and that higher temperatures have contributed significantly to the severe drought over the past 22 years.

Scientists describe it as a “megadrought” in the West and one that, unlike the long droughts of the past, is being amplified by carbon pollution and the heating of the planet.

Lake Mead, the largest reservoir on the Colorado River, declined last week to the lowest level since it was filled in the 1930s following the construction of Hoover Dam. Some researchers have estimated the Colorado River could lose roughly one-fourth of its flow by 2050 as temperatures continue to rise, and that for each additional 1 degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) of warming, the average flow is likely to drop by about 9 percent.

Arizona gets an estimated 36 percent of its water from the Colorado River, and a large portion of it flows through the CAP Canal to cities, farms and tribal lands.

But with a first-ever shortage expected next year, mandatory cutbacks will reduce the Central Arizona Project’s water supply by nearly a third. That will shrink the amount flowing through the CAP Canal to farmlands in Pinal County that produce cotton, hay and other crops.

In a first-level shortage, the water supplies of Arizona’s cities are protected from cuts under the state’s plan. That could change, though, if Lake Mead continues to drop and reaches lower thresholds that would trigger larger cuts.

While the water outlook in the Southwest has worsened over the past year, the organizers of the Arizona Alliance for Golf have sought to mobilize support.

At an event on April 27, members of the alliance welcomed Ducey, who gave opening remarks.

In a tweet, the governor shared a photo of the audience listening to his speech. Ducey tweeted: “The golf industry is critical to growing Arizona’s economy, job opportunities and tourism. Today, I’m proud to help kick off the Arizona Alliance of Golf and ensure our state remains the premier golf destination.” He also mentioned Grayhawk Golf Club.

C.J. Karamargin, Ducey’s spokesperson, said the governor “has been very focused on water issues and he has spoken about the need to prepare for a drier future in Arizona.”

The Department of Water Resources is working on the groundwater management plan through a transparent public process, Karamargin said, and “we’re going to wait and see what happens there, how that plays out.”

Repeated studies have examined golf’s contributions to Arizona’s economy. Four years ago, researchers at the University of Arizona found that the golf industry contributed $3.9 billion in sales to the state’s economy in 2014.

An economic study released in December by the Arizona Alliance for Golf said the industry supports about 50,000 jobs in the state and in 2019 generated an estimated $4.6 billion in economic activity and about $388 million in tax collections.

On National Golf Day several years ago, Ducey’s office said in a statement that “Arizona is a hole-in-one for golfers” and that it’s “a real boon for our economy.”

The membership of the Arizona Alliance for Golf also includes a public entity that manages Phoenix’s public courses. Gregg Bach, a spokesperson for the city of Phoenix’s Parks and Recreation Department, said the city’s Phoenix Golf section is a member of the alliance.

Not everyone in the golf industry opposes the state’s water conservation plan. Chip Howard, an agronomist and golf industry consultant, said that with a few exceptions, “I find this plan to be fair and equitable among golf courses.”

“That said, there will be a few already-small golf courses that will find the proposed plan to be challenging,” Howard said. “I hope that those golf courses can be accommodated in a way that will preserve their viability to contribute to the economy.”

While the debate continues over how much water golf courses should be allowed to use, Arizona is facing more and more warnings that the available water supplies appear insufficient to support all the new subdivisions that are springing up and planned in the state’s rapidly growing cities and suburbs.

Ferris, the former director of the Department of Water Resources, coauthored a report on the subject this year with Sarah Porter, director of Arizona State University’s Kyl Center for Water Policy. They warned that groundwater has been seriously overallocated in areas where aquifers are regulated, allowing for unsustainable pumping that they said threatens the state’s water future.

Ferris and Porter said the state’s leaders need to reform groundwater rules to safeguard desert aquifers and prevent water levels from continuing to decline in many areas.

Ferris helped draft the state’s 1980 Groundwater Management Act and later became director of the Department of Water Resources. Now a senior research fellow at ASU, Ferris said she thinks the department’s proposal makes sense, and she has followed the golf group’s opposition to it.

“I’m dismayed that we’re seeing this kind of pushback from a number of folks,” Ferris said. “It’s sort of indicative of a lack of understanding of how critical the water issues we face are, and that it’s going to take everybody doing their part to ensure that we have sustainable water supplies moving forward.”

Ferris pointed out that representatives of the agriculture industry, which accounts for a large portion of groundwater pumping in regulated areas, have also banded together to press their case as officials consider what allocations to adopt in the groundwater plans.

“There just seems to be a lack of understanding among a number of different groups that we are facing a very difficult time in Arizona’s history, and we can’t go on with business as usual,” she said. “You know, everybody thinks they’re special. But nobody is going to be very special when we run out of water.”

Local board makes decision in millionaires’ squabble over iconic Arizona golf courses

A nearly two-year legal fight over non-golf activities at two of Arizona’s most iconic courses has been decided.

A nearly two-year legal fight over non-golf activities at two of Arizona’s most iconic courses — a dispute that pitted millionaire Phoenix homeowners against high-profile business leaders — has been decided in favor of the residents and their desire to maintain the status quo at the courses.

The Phoenix Board of Adjustment this week decided in favor of the homeowners, upholding an earlier finding from city officials that largely restricts JDM Golf, the courses’ owner, from sponsoring non-golf activities outdoors.

Corporate events, entertainment and other types of events must be held inside the clubhouse or other facilities, must be supported by adequate parking and can’t disrupt nearby residents, the board said.

“That’s all we really wanted,” said Richard Arroyo, president of a local homeowners association group who has spearheaded local opposition to expanded non-golf activities at the courses adjacent to the Arizona Biltmore.

Like many courses in recent years that have expanded non-golf entertainment and activities to generate more revenue, JDM has held or allowed various corporate events, drone-light shows, live-band entertainment, helicopter landings, weddings and other activities. Presumably, some of those will now stop or be restricted to indoors.

The company didn’t respond to requests for comment. JDM Golf is a unit of JDM Partners, owned by Jerry Colangelo, Mel Shultz and David Eaton. Colangelo is one of the Valley’s most recognizable business figures, having served as the former chairman and CEO of both the Phoenix Suns and Arizona Diamondbacks.

The courses aren’t directly affiliated with the Arizona Biltmore resort.

The board’s decision follows a judge’s preliminary order earlier in the week to penalize JDM Golf for filing a previously dismissed lawsuit against the homeowners. Superior Court judge Daniel Martin ordered the company to pay the defendants’ legal fees of $62,598. He added a $12,520 penalty for violating an Arizona statute designed to keep deep-pocket entities from filing harassing, costly or unnecessary lawsuits to stop or discourage citizens from exercising their rights.

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Arizona icons

The Adobe and Links courses have a long history, having been established by chewing-gum magnate William Wrigley Jr. starting in the late 1920s. They have hosted rounds of golf played by presidents and movie stars.

As JDM’s non-golf activities increased, along with a decision to shorten the 18th hole and scrape the existing green, nearby residents became agitated.

“For many years, the golf courses served as a high-end amenity that contributed to the value, desirability, attractiveness and quality of life within the Arizona Biltmore Estates,” said one lawsuit, filed in August 2019 by a limited liability company controlled by Michael Ahearn, a resident who is also chairman and former CEO of Tempe-based First Solar.

In another lawsuit, residents Peter and Sandra Jouflas complained about being woken one morning “by the sounds of tractors and earth-moving equipment” and were stunned to see workers destroying the 18th green of the Adobe course, turning it into a parking lot and golf-cart storage area.

JDM bought the golf courses during the Great Recession in bankruptcy court. Homeowners have maintained that JDM is subject to conditions, covenants and restrictions to which the courses’ prior owner, Kabuto Arizona Properties, agreed in 2003, in exchange for permission to develop more than 100 high-end condominiums along the courses. That document “narrowly and appropriately restricts the activities that may occur on the golf courses,” according to the Ahearn complaint.

JDM countered that it has hosted weddings and other non-golf events for years and received few complaints until recently.

Proposed pavilion worried residents

The changes that worried nearby residents included a proposed 6,000-square-foot pavilion to hold banquets, other special-events facilities, vastly expanded parking lots, flood lighting, an outdoor bar, outdoor restrooms and a separate wedding venue.

JDM filed a proposal for a pavilion with Phoenix planning officials in 2019, when many residents were away for the summer. When they returned, “they looked out their window and saw all this earth being moved,” Arroyo said. He feared a “carnival atmosphere” might develop.

JDM Golf responded by filing a lawsuit of its own — the one recently dismissed —against roughly two dozen homeowners and related entities such as family trusts. The suit detailed seven allegations, ranging from breach of contract to invasion of privacy and defamation, though not all defendants were sued on each count.

Richard Arroyo, president of a homeowners association, opposes proposed changes at two Biltmore golf courses.
Richard Arroyo, president of a homeowners association, opposes proposed changes at two Biltmore golf courses.

Retaliation against residents?

The homeowners argued that their criticism of JDM’s plans to expand non-golf activities was protected by the First Amendment. They hoped to find support from an Arizona law that aims to expedite the dismissal of legal actions brought by developers and other deep-pocket entities against homeowners and others who exercise their right to air grievances.

“They’re targeting the people who have spoken out at hearings, commented on it or written about it,” Arroyo told a Republic reporter last year, moments before Arroyo was told to leave a small restaurant run by the golf courses. “They’re looking for ways to punish me as if it’s a personal campaign.”

Jo Anne Rosensteel, another homeowner who was named in the lawsuit, feared she could “lose everything” just by taking a stand. “I’ve done nothing malicious to them at all but voice my opinion that I’m not in favor of this,” she said at the time.

JDM Partners had complained that a small group of homeowners had sued it to prevent the company from building a new clubhouse and improving the parking situation at the courses.

Changing nature of golf

The lawsuits and resident outrage in the posh neighborhood, where homes sell for seven digits, also reflect the changing role of golf courses as the industry seeks to reinvent itself by attracting a younger, more diverse and more female clientele.

Many courses and country clubs have tried to expand their businesses to include parties, dance classes, pickleball tournaments, beer-tasting events and other non-golf activities.

Some courses have shortened their yardage and removed water holes and sand traps to make for easier, faster play. Others now use carts equipped with television and internet for patrons who don’t want to be unplugged for the four or five hours it takes to play a round.

The JDM lawsuit asserted that about 80,000 rounds are played at the two Biltmore courses annually, down from about 105,000 a decade or more ago.

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Watch this: Using only a putter, man wins Arizona amateur event

Anthony Griggs won a Golfweek Amateur Tour D Flight event at Wild Horse Pass in Chandler, Arizona with just a putter.

Traveling with a full set of clubs isn’t much of a hassle for Anthony Griggs.

One of the newer members of the Golfweek Amateur Tour, Griggs posted a round of 84 to capture the D Flight during a recent event played at Whirlwind Golf Club at Wild Horse Pass in Chandler, Arizona.

But that’s just half the story.

After the round, a member of Griggs’ group insisted he’d just seen the most incredible thing he’d ever witnessed on a golf course.

Griggs, who will turn 61 on May 19, played the entire round with just a putter. Tees, fairways, bunkers and, of course, greens — Griggs only used one trusty club.

An Army veteran originally from Gary, Indiana, Griggs moved to Arizona in 2001 and now makes his home in Mesa. He has played throughout Arizona, including at the Waste Management Pre-Qualifier and the 2018 Kadima Ventures Pro-Am.

And Griggs, who drives the ball more than 200 yards off the tee, does it all with just the one club.

After becoming a pretty good traditional player, Griggs got bored with the game and an acquaintance suggested that if he wanted to challenge himself again, he should play with just a putter. While practicing on the range, he decided to give it a try and found that with some trial and error he could hit the ball pretty well.

He’s been using only a putter on the course ever since.

Anthony Griggs won the D Flight of a Phoenix-area event using just a putter. (Submitted photo)

Originally, Griggs used a Scotty Cameron putter, but it broke while he was preparing for the tournament.

No problem — he went to a nearby Goodwill and bought an old Wilson Staff putter for $2.99. That’s the lone club he used to win the Phoenix-area event as he beat Angelo Faux by six strokes to claim the crown.

Along with his do-it-all partner, friend, sometimes caddie and manager Larry Vinson, Griggs has been working to improve on this incredible idea for roughly four years.

His reward for winning the D Flight at Wild Horse Pass? Griggs will be promoted to B Flight for the next event.

Gabe Garcia is the director of Phoenix and Tucson tours for the Golfweek Amateur Tour.

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Coronavirus: Can you still play golf in Arizona?

Can you still play golf in Arizona? For now, the answer is yes. The coronavirus has put most of life around the world on hold, restricting activities in which groups of people gather, especially indoors. With 45 confirmed cases as of March 19 – but …

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Can you still play golf in Arizona?

For now, the answer is yes.

The coronavirus has put most of life around the world on hold, restricting activities in which groups of people gather, especially indoors.

With 45 confirmed cases as of March 19 – but zero deaths – Arizona has taken many measures to combat the pandemic. The number of reported cases in the state is likely much higher than the numbers reflect because of limited testing availability.

The City of Phoenix has declared a state of emergency, forcing the closure of bars and moving restaurants to takeout, delivery and drive-thru but statewide, Arizona Governor Doug Ducey has not shut down on-site consumption at restaurants and bars, as leaders in California, Illinois, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Ohio and Washington have. Nor has he shuttered state parks and museums, like New Mexico’s governor, or said he’s weighing a statewide curfew, like New Jersey’s top executive.

As for the golf, in Tucson, the Pascua Yaqui Tribe has closed down operations until April 13 of its Casino Del Sol and Sewailo Golf Club, home of the University of Arizona’s men’s and women’s golf teams. A statement on its website says:

“We are taking these steps because our priority (our community) is our team members, our guests, and the wider community of Tucson, Southern Arizona, and the State of Arizona. We believe that by doing this we will help to reduce the impact of the virus in our community, and that makes this the right thing to do.”

Tee it up

March is one of the prime times for golf in the state, which typically draws countless out-of-towners, many of whom pay upwards of $200 to enjoy the better courses in the Phoenix and Scottsdale area.

A check of the different city websites shows that municipal courses have available tee times. Those include Papago Golf Course, home to Arizona State’s men’s and women’s teams, and Grand Canyon University Golf Course, home to the GCU men’s and women’s teams.

That appears to represent the response of the overall Arizona golf community: We’re open for business.

Grayhawk Golf Club, which has two 18-hole courses – Raptor and Talon – was set to host the 2020 NCAA men’s and women’s golf championships in May for the first of three consecutive years. Those championships are off, canceled along with all other spring sports championships by the NCAA. But Grayhawk is still open for business and taking daily tee times, including a 36-hole special.

Troon, which operates 55 golf properties in Arizona, including Quintero Golf Club, a high-end course course ranked No. 2 on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play, hasn’t closed any facilities. Other courses on Troon’s roster include Troon North, Ak-Chin Southern Dunes, Boulders Resort, Talking Stick and Kierland. A statement on its website says:

“We remain positive and hopeful as to the ultimate outcome of this situation, and recognize it will take time to resolve itself. We will continue to evaluate and adjust our approach in accordance with direction from the relevant federal, state and local health authorities and medical professionals.”

RELATED: Courses that host PGA Tour, LPGA tournaments in Arizona are taking tee times

San Marcos Golf Course in suburban Chandler, built in 1913, the year after Arizona achieved statehood, is remaining open. The course holds the distinction as being the first green grass golf course in Arizona.

Arcis Golf, which operates 61 clubs in eight states, including six daily-fee courses in the Phoenix area, sent an email on Wednesday night declaring that its facilities will remain open.

“We believe that we can make the greatest positive impact by doing what we do best – serving our community. … by keeping our golf courses and other outdoor recreational amenities open for play and relaxation. Whether on the range or course, social distancing protocols will be continually implemented to allow families to enjoy a little fresh air and the games that they truly love.”

Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play in Arizona

All courses, as of March 19, 2020, are open, unless noted below.

1. We-Ko-Pa (Saguaro)
2. Quintero GC, Peoria
3. Ritz-Carlton Golf Club at Dove Mountain (Saguaro/Tortolita), Marana
4. Wickenburg Ranch, Wickenburg
5. TPC Scottsdale (Stadium), Scottsdale
6. Ak-Chin Southern Dunes, Maricopa
7. Troon North (Monument), Scottsdale
8. We-Ko-Pa (Cholla), Fort McDowell
9. Troon North (Pinnacle), Scottsdale
10. Ventana Canyon (Mountain),Tucson
11. Verrado GC, Buckeye
12. Boulders Resort (North), Carefree
13. Sewailo GC, Tucson CLOSED UNTIL APRIL 13
14. Laughlin Ranch, Bullhead City
15. Boulders Resort (South), Carefree
16. Apache Stronghold, San Carlos
17. Grayhawk (Raptor), Scottsdale
18. Talking Stick (North), Scottsdale
19. Grayhawk (Talon), Scottsdale
20. La Paloma GC (Ridge/Canyon), Tucson
21. Gold Canyon Golf Resort (Dinosaur Mountain), Gold Canyon
22. Papago Municipal Golf Course, Phoenix
23. SunRidge Canyon, Fountain Hills
24. Victory at Verrado, Buckeye
25. Los Caballeros Golf Club, Wickenburg
26. Kierland GC, Scottsdale
27. Camelback GC (Ambiente), Scottsdale
28. Wigwam Golf Club (Gold), Litchfield Park
29. Ventana Canyon (Canyon), Tucson
30. Wildfire at Desert Ridge (Faldo Course), Phoenix

Local associations reaction

The Arizona Golf Association did announce that tournaments scheduled through the end of March have been canceled but that players can still play the courses they signed up to play, just not as part of a tournament. The Southwest Section PGA announced on its website that events through April 15 have been canceled.

azcentral.com contributed to this report.