www.issuu.com/oceanpinesprogress
February 2017
443-359-7527
Family Fun Nights may be moved from Yacht Club Because arcane parking requirements could require the Yacht Club pool to close at 6 p.m. this summer, the popular family fun nights that have brought hundreds of families with children to the otherwise adults-only Yacht Club pool on Wednesdays may have to find a new home. ~ Page 6
THE OCEAN PINES JOURNAL OF NEWS & COMMENTARY Hill proposes indoor pickleball facility at S&R Club
COVER STORY
MEMBERSHIP MASH-UP Board restructures Beach Club parking, pool passes; creates new landlord/renter package Parking fees increased from $175 to $200, to include photo IDs for parking lot, pool access By TOM STAUSS Publisher hat began as a status quo budget with no increase in lot assessments and only minor changes in amenity fees morphed into dramatic change in fees affecting Beach Club parking, aquatics, racquet sports and golf during 2017-18 budget review meetings in early February. During a Feb. 8 meeting, Acting General Manager Brett Hill and Aquatics Director Colby Phillips described a proposed restructuring of Beach Club parking and pool pass options that could substantially boost Ocean Pines Association revenue in both Beach Club parking and the Aquatics Department this summer. The board approved all of the changes later in the meeting, subject to final ratification when the budget is approved later in February. While basic membership fees in Aquatics for families and individuals remain unchanged, the board subsequently voted to increase the Beach Club parking pass from $175 to $200, with the additional $25 in revenue to be allocated to the Aquatics Department. The parking pass fee for those with other kinds of memberships would increase from $75 to $100. The increase could mean another $20,000 or so to the Aquatics department depending on how many passes are purchased with the higher fees and new restrictions on the Beach Club pool passes included with them. Aquatics received around $51,000 in revenue from the bundled sale of parking and pool passes this past summer, according to retiring OPA Controller Art Carmine. In a significant change from prior summers, the new Beach Club parking/pool passes will contain photo IDs of household members. The four pool passes that previously were bundled with the To Page 33
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Board authorizes significant reduction in golf member fees By TOM STAUSS Publisher he Board of Directors in a budget work session Feb. 10 voted to lower golf member rates significantly for the 2017-18 budget year. The directors also agreed to reinstitute a 30-round membership category that would allow nine-hole players to play up to 60 nine-hole rounds, a feature dropped in recent years and blamed for a decline in memberships from those who prefer to play nine rather than the standard 18-hole round. The cost for this option, which essentially is a pre-paid debit card, is $1200, and can be used by property owners and their guests playing with them. Carts are included as are other member benefits. Director Dave Stevens introduced the new lower rate package to his colleagues, telling them they were the result of a meeting held a day earlier with himself, OPA President Tom Herrick, and Golf Advisory Committee chair Bob Kessler. In addition to lower membership rates, the approved plan incorporates a number of ideas promoted by the OPA’s golf course management company, Landscapes Unlimited. Perhaps the most prominent idea adopted from among LU marketing proposals is the all-amenity package, a family membership to cost $2500 that will include unlimited golf and prepaid use of the Ocean Pines’ five swimming pools and racquet sport facilities. Golf carts and Beach Club parking passes are not included but would be available for purchase as they are for any amenity member. Herrick said LU had agreed to share revenues generated from the all-amenities package in such a way that aquatics and racquet sports will be credited for the full amount of membership fees that would have been generated had they been sold individually. What’s left will be credited to golf. To Page 32
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Pickleball, tennis fees reduced ~ Page 32
With the Ocean Pines pickleball club on record as opposing the recent reduction of the number of pickleball courts at the Community Center gymnasium from three to two, and adamantly opposed to drop-in fees, Acting General Manager Brett Hill has a new idea for pickleball that might make the group happy in the longer term. His proposal would repurpose two of the four tennis courts at the Swim and Racquet Club campus into an indoor facility dedicated to pickleball. He told his colleagues on the Board of Directors that he envisions a pole barn building replacing two of the tennis courts at the campus. ~ Page 13
Board approves new playground at Manklin Meadows Replacement of defective wooden play equipment at the Manklin Meadows Recreation Complex was given the go-ahead by the Board of Directors at a cost of $212,000 during a Jan. 28 meeting. Directors voted 5-0, with two members abstaining, to approve a contract with River Valley Recreation for the Playcraft Systems’ playground at a cost of $212,577 plus a 10 percent project contingency cost. Acting General Manager Brett Hillpresented the request for contract approval during a Jan. 27 board meeting. ~ Page 14
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