44°F
weather icon Partly Cloudy

City to eliminate 16 acres of golf course turf

As part of the consent agenda in their July 11 meeting, the City Council approved a contract for professional services associated with a coming redesign of the irrigation system at the Boulder City Municipal Golf Course.

In addition to a redesign of the irrigation system, some non-functional turf will be removed in the name of water conservation.

The contract for $338,920 with LAGE Design Inc. will cover project management services, preliminary design services, concept development, final design services, and supplemental services.

“No schedule has been established yet, but the firm will keep nine holes open during the work. Impacts to golfers and residents will be considered and minimized as much as possible,” said Utilities Director Joe Stubitz.

In addition to an overall need for water conservation in the Mojave, the need for this particular project was driven by recent actions taken by the Southern Nevada Water Authority.

“In May 2022, the SNWA approved a resolution to reduce golf course water budgets from 6.3 acre-feet per year per irrigated acre to 4.0 acre-feet per irrigated acre effective in 2024,” Stubitz explained in an email.

Notably, the water situation at the municipal course is substantially more dire. At a current use of 7.09 acre feet of water per year, the course is already about 10% above the old standard. In order to meet the new standard, which takes effect next year, water use at the course will have to drop by just shy of 43%.

Stubitz continued, “In fiscal year 2022, Boulder Creek Golf Course used 7.09 acre-feet of water per irrigated acre or 0.79 acre-feet of water over the SNWA water budget of 6.3 acre-feet of water per year per irrigated acre. Starting in January, courses will be restricted to 4-acre feet (about 1.3 million gallons) per year.” One acre foot is 325,851 gallons of water. The amount of water that will have to be cut from use at the course is almost 1 million gallons per year.

The amount of turf to be removed is substantial.

“Last year, City Council approved the removal of 721,000 square feet of grass at Boulder City Municipal Golf Course,” said City Manager Taylour Tedder. “This is turf that sits outside the edges of areas needed for play. This removal represents 13% of the water usage at the municipal course.”

But even the removal of three-quarters of a million square feet of turf will not be enough to meet the standard set to take effect in 2024.

“Further work is necessary to update the irrigation system and other improvements to meet the allowable four acre-feet per irrigated acre water budget for golf courses that goes into effect in 2024,” Tedder said.

The entire project has a projected cost of $6.5 million. Of that , $2 million is from the city’s 2024 capital budget with the other $4.5 million coming in the form of ARPA (American Recovery Plan Act) federal funding.

Both Tedder and Stubitz noted that the municipal course still has the original irrigation system that was installed 50 years ago. In addition to more modern systems being more efficient, there is no way to escape the fact that a 50-year-old system is leaky and inefficient.

Boulder City has three golf courses total, two that are available to the public without a membership. Is the other public course, Boulder Creek, in compliance or is the city going to have to do the same kind of work there?

Stubitz explains, “Boulder Creek will also need to make additional changes to comply, but to a lesser extent than the municipal course as we have already completed several efforts including changing irrigated native areas to 180-degree heads, shutting off two non-functional ponds, and more. This has resulted in water savings now. Boulder Creek is a newer course, so the irrigation system is much more effective and the course was built with a desert landscaping theme.”

Contact reporter Bill Evans at wevans@bouldercityreview.com or at 702-586-9401.

MOST READ
THE LATEST
Meet the ‘new’ judge

If that person overseeing hearings of the Boulder City Municipal Court looks familiar come Jan. 7, there is a good reason for that.

Garrett’s gardening gurus

There’s a good chance that waiting under the tree on Christmas morning for several Garrett Junior High students will be at-home hydroponic kits.

Council votes to approve $3M in spending

In their meeting of Dec. 10, the city council approved well over $3 million in spending in a single vote.

Rowland Lagan honored with city award

For the past quarter-century, Jill Rowland Lagan has gone above and beyond to help promote Boulder City and its businesses as CEO of the Boulder City Chamber of Commerce.

Christmas came early to Boulder City

This past weekend, thousands turned out for a vanity of holiday events in Boulder City including the Luminaria, lighting of the Christmas House and community tree, Doodlebug Bazaar and Santa’s Electric Light Parade.

State breaks ground on new railroad museum

A lot has changed about Boulder City since it was founded nearly a century ago but one thing has remained a constant: The lot on the northwest corner of Buchanan and Boulder City Parkway has always been vacant. But that is about to change as ground was broken on Friday for a long-awaited expansion of the Nevada State Railroad Museum that is slated to open on that corner in the summer of 2026.

Leafy Latitude gets their liquor license

It took more than a year, but the owners of the Leafy Latitude cigar bar on Nevada Way finally got their liquor license approved last week.

Residents grill BoR rep about xeriscape

Vernon Cunningham, deputy public affairs director for the Bureau of Reclamation Lower Colorado Basin Region, was at last week’s meeting of the Historic Preservation Commission to make a presentation about proposed signage at the site of the bureau’s headquarters at the top of Park Street.

The joy of giving on Christmas

Christmas is a day about giving to others, gathering with friends and family and enjoying a turkey or ham dinner with all the traditional sides.