Coronavirus: Famed Massachusetts club files for bankruptcy protection

The International Golf Club & Resort in Bolton filed for Chapter 11, and the club’s management has told employees it will not re-open.

The International Golf Club & Resort in Bolton, once home to the world’s longest golf course, filed for Chapter 11 on Monday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court District of Massachusetts, and the club’s management has told employees it will not re-open, even after the coronavirus pandemic has cleared.

The club, which originated as a nine-hole course in 1899, is located less than an hour northwest of Boston.

Geoffrey Cornish was the original course architect and Robert Trent Jones, Sr., redesigned the original layout in 1972. After Jones’ redesign, the Pines Course was the longest course in the world, and also considered one of the most difficult.

A second course, designed by Tom Fazio and named The Oaks, was added in 1999.

According to the bankruptcy filing, the International and related entities listed assets of $10 million-$50 million and liabilities of $10 million to $50 million for 100-199 creditors.

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Chapter 11 allows a reorganization of a debtor’s business debts and assets. In most instances, the filing of Chapter 11 automatically stays certain collection and other actions against the debtor and the debtor’s property.

On March 18, the club closed and laid off the majority of its staff, a day after the state ruled all restaurants must close other than takeout service due to the coronavirus. Members and those with events booked at the club scrambled for refunds.

Owners Kevin Weadock and Ann Weadock informed managers that the coronavirus had worsened the private club’s financial outlook and that the club would not reopen, not even after the virus threat ended, according to multiple people at the March 18 meeting. Members were told only that the majority of the staff was let go.

Members heard nothing from the club until a week later when Kevin Weadock emailed them to say the club would reopen when Gov. Charlie Baker allowed golf courses to do so. People who had booked weddings at the International weren’t told anything. The governor has closed nonessential businesses until at least May 18.

Nine days after the club closed, Bryan Weadock said he had taken over control of the club in place of his brother Kevin. That day, Bryan Weadock disputed rumors that the family was considering bankruptcy, insisted the family has the finances to continue to run the club, and said that it was not for sale.

Albano said he has since booked Wedgewood Pines CC for the same date and that Wedgewood has been far more accommodating.

The International operates as three entities: the International Golf Club, which oversees the golf courses and memberships, Arklow, which owns 700 acres of real estate on which the club operates, and Wealyn, a limited liability company that manages food and beverage service. Arklow’s limited partners are: Florence Weadock, her sons Kevin and Daniel Weadock, her daughter Ann Specht, and Brian Lynch. Wealyn’s members are: Lynch, Florence Weadock and Arklow.

According to the bankruptcy filing, the largest debt of $10.4 million is owed to Florence Weadock, whose children manage the club. In 1999, Arklow borrowed $10 million from Florence Weadock to purchase land for the construction of the Oaks Course. In 2014, Arklow borrowed $9 million on an unsecured basis from Bank of America to fund International’s operations. As a condition of the loan, BOA required Florence Weadock to guaranty the debt and to collateralize her guaranty with securities.

Arklow also owes the town of Bolton $54,000 in real estate taxes.

Twenty of the other largest creditors are owed $65,000 to $80,000 each. The club’s initiation fee is $65,000 and annual dues are $8,000. The club listed 39 active deposit members and 100 active non-deposit members.

The International has two 18-hole golf courses, a 54-room hotel, a restaurant and a function room.

Donald Ethan Jeffery, the Boston attorney who filed for bankruptcy on behalf of the club, did not immediately return a voice message.

Bill Doyle is a reporter for the Worcester Telegram and Gazette, a part of the USA Today Network. Contact him at atwilliam.doyle@telegram.com. Follow him on Twitter@BillDoyle15.

Coronavirus: Massachusetts course owners teed off they’re still closed

Golf course owners are teed off that while neighboring states are allowing golf, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts is not.

Gov. Charlie Baker has closed golf courses in Massachusetts as nonessential businesses during the coronavirus pandemic, but courses in neighboring Connecticut, Rhode Island, Maine and New York are open.

Golf course owners in Massachusetts are teed off. Not only that, Baker signed an executive order on Friday that makes wearing face masks in public mandatory.

Heritage is located less than 10 miles from the Connecticut border and Plante said some of Heritage’s regular golfers are traveling south to play.

“It’s not only frustrating,” said Bill Plante, owner of Heritage CC in Charlton, “but can someone tell me, ‘Is the air different in Connecticut than it is here?’ Because that’s what we’re treating it like.”

Plante said he reached out to members of the state Legislature in an attempt to open golf courses in the state sooner than the May 18 date that the governor has set.

The National Golf Foundation reported earlier this week that 58 percent of the courses in the U.S. were open as of April 26, many with social distancing restrictions and other precautions such as only online payment and making walking required to prevent the spread of the disease that has killed more than 64,000 Americans and more than 236,000 around the globe.

Plante said he hasn’t heard about anyone contracting the coronavirus by playing golf in Connecticut. He pointed out that the golf season in Massachusetts usually lasts only six months so courses will take a huge financial hit by closing for a month or two. Losing golf outings and weddings will hurt as well.

“I don’t know if they’ll open clubhouses all year long,” Plante said.

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Plante believes golf courses will be able to enforce social distancing.

“The state is saying we’re stupid and we can’t go out and do any of this,” Plante said. “They’re not going to let us because we’re just not going to follow it and I disagree with that.”

“Golf is a very healthy sport and activity,” he said, “that can be aligned with the activities that are currently available, walking, biking, hiking and riding. It’s not only good for public health, it’s good for physical and mental health.”

“Golf courses are the safest place in the world to be right now,” said Gordon Bliss, owner of Blissful Meadows GC in Uxbridge. “There isn’t a safer place and I cannot understand why people don’t understand that. We’ve got over an acre per person with a full golf course here. So people can spread apart and remain healthy.”

Bliss’ son, Kevin, owns Crystal Lake GC in Burrillville, Rhode Island, and his golf course is busy. Massachusetts golfers are not allowed to golf play in Rhode Island until after they’ve quarantined for 14 days, but they can play golf in Connecticut without quarantining. Bliss said some golfers who usually play Blissful Meadows are playing at Raceway Golf Club in Thompson, Connecticut, and Connecticut National in Putnam, Connecticut.

“It’s a stinking shame that there’s such a variety of practices between states,” Bliss said. “They’re taking all the golfers down there and letting them play and then sending them back here and creating crowds that are beyond imagination.”

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Dudley Darling, general manager at Juniper Hill GC in Northboro, said some of his regular golfers are also playing in Connecticut.

“I can understand that, but it’s tough,” he said. “I believe we could be open. I believe we should be open, but we’re not going to violate the governor’s order.”

Darling would like courses in the state to open by National Golf Day on Wednesday, but he doesn’t expect it.

When Juniper is allowed to reopen, it will do its best to protect the golfers from the pandemic. Juniper has installed a Plexiglas partition at the pro shop counter, will accept credit card payments only and will restrict access to the pro shop to the counter and bathrooms. Staff will wear gloves and masks. Carts will be restricted to single riders and disinfected after each use. Golfers will tee off at 10- or 12-minute intervals instead of the usual eight. Cups on the greens will be raised and bunker rakes and ball washers will be removed for non-touch rounds.

“How many sports can you play where it’s a non-contact sport?” said Joe Carr, owner of Bedrock GC in Rutland. “There’s probably only a 5% reason we shouldn’t be playing. I don’t see a problem with playing.”

“I don’t understand it,” Holden Hills CC general manager Jeff Bailey said. “I don’t think it’s right. I really don’t. People should be allowed to go outside, get some exercise, play some golf. I don’t understand why they’re not allowing it.”

Nick Marrone, one of the owners of Wachusett CC in West Boylston and Kettle Brook GC in Paxton, had hoped to receive town board approval to open both courses this weekend, but posted on the clubs’ websites that they will not open yet.

Golf courses would be fined $300 per day if they opened before the governor allows.

“The alliance does not feel golf courses should open right now,” Menachem said. “It’s not going to help our cause in getting golf open in the very short term.”

Bill Doyle is a reporter at the Worcester (Mass.) Telegram & Gazette, part of the USA Today Network. He can be contacted at william.doyle@telegram.com. Follow him on Twitter@BillDoyle15

Coronavirus quarantine: Police charge 3 from Mass. with golfing in R.I.

Three Massachusetts men who played golf in Rhode Island are charged with violating the order for out-of-state residents to self-quarantine.

RICHMOND, R.I. — Three Massachusetts men who played golf in Rhode Island are charged with violating Gov. Gina Raimondo’s order for out-of-state residents to self-quarantine if visiting the state for purposes not related to work, according to the Providence Journal.

Richmond Police Chief Elwood Johnson said in a news release that police received a call Wednesday afternoon from the local McDonald’s, reporting that two cars with Massachusetts license plates had been parked there for several hours.

The caller told police that three men had removed golf clubs from the cars, entered another car with Rhode Island plates and left.

At 3:15 p.m., police officers saw the men return and unload their golf clubs from the Rhode Island vehicle.

Johnson said the three men — Gregory S. Corbett, 51, of Attleboro; Tyler E. Pietrzyk, 22, of Taunton; and Nye M. Cameron, 22, of Taunton — had played a round of golf less than a mile away at the Meadowbrook Golf Course.

A sign at Meadowbrook Golf Course in Richmond, R.I.

The golf course had posted signs stating that the course was open to Rhode Island residents only, following Raimondo’s order on Saturday that all people from out-of-state self-quarantine for 14 days after arriving in Rhode Island for a non-work-related purpose.

The three were released at the scene with a summons to appear in court on May 14.

Johnson said police had received numerous calls about an increase in out-of-state residents visiting golf courses after golf courses in Massachusetts closed last week. He said public golf courses in Richmond were now requiring golfers to present valid Rhode Island identification.

Richmond is one of just two communities in Rhode Island (the other is New Shoreham) that did not have a confirmed coronavirus case as of Thursday.

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