Golf capital projects for FY2026 presented with no changes; committee had no pullouts
Loading...
Summary
Staff presented the FY2026 golf capital projects list and said there were no changes from previous briefings; committee members noted there were no proposed pullouts from golf for the upcoming budget and asked for transparency on allowance funds for potential projects such as ball-machine moves.
Sun City West staff presented the golf capital projects list for fiscal year 2026 to the Golf Committee on April 10 and reported no substantive updates from previous briefings.
The presentation included a slide showing replacement items for golf and landscaping and allowance totals. Staff said the capital list was current and up-to-date and that committee members could review posted documents online. Committee members confirmed there were no “pullouts” (individual items they wanted removed from the bundled approval for separate discussion) from the golf capital list for the upcoming budget vote.
Why it matters: Capital lists determine which projects receive funding in the coming fiscal year. Committee members noted that large new projects (for example, a program to relocate range ball machines) are not currently earmarked in the FY2026 capital budget and would require separate consideration or use of allowance funds.
Key points - No changes: Staff said there were no material changes to the golf capital projects since previous presentations and invited committee questions; none were offered. - Pullouts: Committee members confirmed no golf pullouts would be requested when the governing board considers the capital list; pullouts allow individual items to be discussed separately instead of approving the package as a whole. - Funding options: Staff reminded the committee that allowance funds, project savings and other internal sources can be used if the governing board approves projects outside the published capital lines.
Ending The committee took no formal action at the meeting and will consider requests for additional projects (such as potential ball-machine relocation costs) once staff returns with more detailed cost estimates.

