Lethbridge Herald

Golf courses can be safe

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I do not understand the logic of not allowing golf on fairways. I went to a city park and there were a fair number of people walking around the lake. They were doing a good job of social distancing; however, there were people every seven or eight feet apart.

If I am on the golf course, the spacing between group of golfers (four to a group) is 300-plus yards. Each group of four would maintain two metres between them. I am sure you see the irony in closing the golf course and leaving the park open. Further, our club put very strict rules in place for distancing, sanitizing, spacing along with monitoring. If you broke the rules you would be suspended for a month. We only want the golf course open, not the club house nor the pro shop or anything else.

I have been excessivel­y careful and, with the exception of getting groceries, I have not left my house for seven weeks. I didn’t want to go walking in the park, because in my opinion there were too many people there.

It is very disappoint­ing to have a bureaucrat have such a closed mind. Worse yet, our politician­s go along with it. Here are some other observatio­ns I have made. Gas pump handle, no sanitizati­on after use; grocery store self check-out touch key pad, no sanitation afterwards! There are many such examples of a higher risk of contaminat­ion than golfing where you touch nothing that another member touches — no flags so you don’t touch them, only you touch your golf balls and equipment (clubs, etc.) If a cart is needed, only a single rider with sterilizat­ion after use.

To hear a bureaucrat say, well, this is one of the hardships you must endure means I am not going to use common sense to evaluate this situation and see if there really is a higher risk of infection by using golf course fairways for people to go for a walk on and, while they’re at it, they can hit a golf ball.

Ken Knox

Lethbridge

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