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Oak Hills staff roll out enforcement, signage and extra rangers to speed up slow rounds
Summary
After two years of data collection, course staff presented findings showing more late-afternoon and weekend rounds exceed the authority's target; staff installed new signage, empowered rangers to move slow groups, added rangers at peak times and are piloting software to identify hold-ups.
Tom Sacco, a course ranger, told the Oak Hills Park Authority that two years of data collection show a measurable increase in long rounds, particularly on weekend afternoons. He outlined new steps staff have taken to enforce pace-of-play rules and to pinpoint slow groups. "The statistics that are in this presentation have been thoroughly researched and are in no way subjective," Sacco said.
The measures are aimed at addressing what staff described as a drift toward longer rounds as the course has attracted more out-of-area and less-experienced players. Course staff installed new pace-of-play signage at the starter podium and on holes 7 and 10, empowered…
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