Texarkana Gazette

Golfer: ‘Like we had targets on our backs’

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YORK, Pa.—Black people have long complained about getting pulled over by police for “driving while black,” or being eyed suspicious­ly by store security guards for “shopping while black.” Now a group of women says it got into trouble for golfing while black.

Officials at the Grandview Golf Club in York called police on the group, accusing them of playing too slowly and holding up others behind them.

No charges were filed, but the confrontat­ion Saturday touched a raw nerve after two other somewhat similar incidents. Two black men in Philadelph­ia were handcuffed and arrested on April 12 after a Starbucks employee called police because they hadn’t bought anything in the store. And employees of an LA Fitness in New Jersey wrongly accused a black member and his guest of not paying to work out and called police, prompting an apology from the company.

One of the black women golfers, Sandra Harrison, said they were at the second hole when representa­tives of the Grandview Golf Club told the group they were playing too slowly.

After the ninth hole, about an hour and 45 minutes later, they were told that they took too long a break and needed to leave.

Harrison said she and two other women left because they were so rattled by the treatment.

“It was like we were playing with targets on our backs,” she said. “What other reason could there be other than we were guilty of being black while golfing?”

The club called police on the two women who remained.

On Sunday club co-owner JJ Chronister told the York Daily Record she called the women personally to “sincerely apologize.” On Monday, she issued a second statement to the newspaper saying players who are slow typically leave the course when asked by personnel.

“In this instance, the members refused to leave so we called police to ensure an amicable result,” the statement reads. It says the women skipped holes and took an extended break.

It’s part of golf etiquette that slow-moving players let groups behind them play through if they are holding things up.

The five are part of a larger group of local women known as Sisters in the Fairway. The group has been around for at least a decade, and all of its members are experience­d players who have golfed all over the country and world. They’re very familiar with golf etiquette, Harrison said

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ Sandra Thompson, right, speaks alongside Sandra Harrison, both golfers and members of a group of local women known as Sisters in the Fairway, during an interview Tuesday in York, Pa. Officials at the Grandview Golf Club in York called police on the...
Associated Press ■ Sandra Thompson, right, speaks alongside Sandra Harrison, both golfers and members of a group of local women known as Sisters in the Fairway, during an interview Tuesday in York, Pa. Officials at the Grandview Golf Club in York called police on the...

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