Say Goodbye to Miniature Golf
by
Andrew S. Fischer
by Andrew S. Fischer
In
New Jersey not long ago, I went to play miniature golf with my fiancée.
I'll call the place "Golfville." After we'd paid, we discovered
that the course consisted of nothing but flat, straight, unchallenging
par-2 holes. I immediately complained to the management, and the
response was that a NJ law requires any new miniature golf course
to be wheelchair accessible!
In
other words, I mused, only crappy miniature golf courses can now
be built which means no one who isn't handicapped will
want to play, effectively killing the pastime just so a handful
of theoretical miniature golf "diehards on wheelchairs" can play.
Sounded pretty stupid. (BTW, we didn't even bother playing, and
they wouldn't give me a refund.)
An
online search of NJ statutes turned up nothing about miniature golf
courses, so I assumed the proprietor of "Golfville" was simply a
big, fat prevaricator. Not so, as it happens, for the actual perpetrator
of such idiocy is you guessed it the big, fat federal
government.
Specifically,
the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board (an
Orwellian moniker if ever there was one) issued a "final rule" in
2002 that "amends ADAAG (Americans with Disabilities Act Accessibility
Guidelines) by adding a new "special application section for amusement
rides, boating facilities, fishing piers and platforms, golf courses,
miniature golf, sports facilities, and swimming pools and spas."
Just what the nation needed.
I
invite readers to peruse this
overstuffed 90-page document. It provides guidance to entrepreneurs
on everything from "Multiple Chemical Sensitivities and Electromagnetic
Sensitivities" to "Shoulder-to-Shoulder Seating" on amusement rides.
It's hard to believe how much time and money was obviously spent
on micro-managing every aspect of recreation which might be applicable
to the disabled.
An
email to the aforementioned Compliance Board produced a response
that "The Department of Justice (DOJ) has not yet adopted the ADA
Accessibility Guidelines for Miniature Golf Courses as the enforceable
standard.... It is likely for this process to take a couple of years
to be completed.... They will become the standard in the future."
So the time to get your mini-golf ya-yas out is now.
The
miniature
golf regulations can be found at Accessible
Rout. They apply to newly-constructed and altered courses
which allows plenty of leeway for forcing owners who want
to renovate a hole or two to re-do the whole shebang. The operator
of "Golfville" had it wrong, though only half of the holes
have to be accessible. According to the guidelines, the holes must
be consecutive, to offer a "more socially integrated experience."

There
are plenty of other nit-picking rules (and illustrations); for example:
"There
is usually a curb around a hole to keep the ball within the area.
When the accessible route is provided on the course, a 1-inch high
maximum curb is permitted for an opening of 32 inches minimum where
the accessible route extends outside the hole. This opening will
permit passage of wheelchairs, while containing the ball within
the hole. Designers should consider locating this opening in an
area where the ball is not likely to roll. The accessible route
on a playing surface must be within 36 inches (the golf club reach
range) of any area where the ball comes to rest."
"Landings
must be 48 inches long. Where ramps change direction, the landing
size must be a minimum of 48 inches by 60 inches. The orientation
of the length and the width have not been specified for added flexibility
in design. Slopes on landings must be no more than 1:20 (5%). If
the accessible route is on the playing surface, handrails are not
required. The accessible route may include a maximum slope of 1:4
(25%) for a maximum 4-inch rise. These steeper slopes or ramps are
permitted for limited distances."
I
understand the desire to include the disabled in recreational activities,
and this is not a bad idea. (I'm sure that if I were wheelchair-bound
I'd be complaining about all the things I couldn't do and all the
places I couldn't go. Would I have the right, however, to demand
access to everywhere I feel like going?) What I don't understand
is that the federal government has any business telling mini-golf
entrepreneurs what they can and can't do with their own property,
that it can define what a "socially integrated experience" is, and
then it can force all of this down everyone's throat in order to
include a small minority which may or may not have any interest
in the activity in the first place.
If
there were, in fact, a demand for wheelchair-accessible mini-golf
courses, wouldn't businesspeople be building them? The disabled
from miles and miles around would descend like locusts upon such
places, and their owners would make fortunes! Forced compliance
would be unnecessary if the need actually existed.
So,
as old mini-golf courses wear out and new ones are built, nine holes
out of eighteen will be tepid at best, effectively killing the fun
for the non-disabled 99% of players. An alternative would be to
build two courses, one for the disabled and one for the non-disabled.
Twice as expensive to build, but too bad for the entrepreneur....
Of course, all of this will really improve people's attitudes toward
the handicapped.
July
27, 2005
Andrew
S. Fischer [send him mail] is
a controller for an investment advisory firm in Pennsylvania.
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© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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