The City Council went into executive session after holding its open meeting, Jan. 22, which included Spirit Golf partners Richard Holcomb and Todd Barranger. But no action was taken when they came out of the fourth executive session to hammer out the contract.
Several people—most of them living in houses that were part of the development, unbundled from the golf-course property before it was gifted to the City in 2017—spoke during public comment.
Shannon Whitehead said, “I don’t know Spirit Golf, but I can vouch that since they bought Picacho Hills (golf course in Las Cruces) they have turned it around. We need someone who knows the golf business. We have had others who managed the golf course who know management, but not golf.”
If the golf course deteriorates further, Whitehead warned, “Houses will become vacant.”
Sheridan Fuss said he owns three homes and two lots near the course. “The restaurant and bar have never been better in the 10 years I’ve been here.” Fuss said he no longer plays, but the course “looks the worst it has in 10 years.”
Jerry Traweek said, “Spirit Golf knows golf. I was (course) superintendent (at Sierra Del Rio) for years. We had two management companies that didn’t help. All they did was cut spending. I am all for Spirit Golf. But we don’t know what’s on the table . . . What are the parameters of this deal? We would like to know so we can form an opinion based on fact, not rumor.”
Mayor Edna Trager responded by giving the City’s financial output over the last three years. The first year the city paid $300,000 into the course, she said, but it was money from the sale of the liquor license.
The second year, “$200,000 was transferred from the City to the golf course,” Trager said, which “set off red flags with the DFA (Department of Finance and Administration). They said the golf course is an enterprise fund and must stand on its own.”
According to City financial documents, the third and current fiscal year, the City has budgeted $325,000, with nearly $107,000 spent so far. That’s less than 50-percent expenditure mid-year, Trager said, demonstrating the City has slowed expenses and raised revenue.
Lots of repairs had to be done, Trager said, such as a new electrical system and roof for the restaurant. On the other hand, rounds of golf have gone from about 800 to over 10,000 a year and “bar and restaurant revenue is going up,” she said.
The DFA and other New Mexico State departments “are looking over our shoulders,” Trager pointed out, and as a “municipally-owned golf course,” the particulars of the deal can’t be revealed until it is final.