Some people, EVEN RANDOM MEMBERS, get the idea that the USBC is going to go belly up if something is not done. They can't keep bleeding funds into programs that have NO returns ( LIKE AWARDS) without getting into trouble eventually. Just like your home budget, you have to put your money towards your obligations first, THEN you can do stuff like give aways with whats left. Thanks to economic changes, and no price increase in YEARS, USBC doesnt have the discretionary funds they once had to fund those "give away" programs.
Like it or not, the USBC is what keeps bowling as a nationally regulated activity instead of letting it become a regionally, or locally, unregulated activity where every little "burg" you come across plays by their own set of rules. You think cheating and sandbagging is bad now, try a world with no governing body and see how that one works out for you.
Like it or not, when membership goes down, that does not mean administrative costs go down, it just means that, without a dues increase, the money you have to operate on dwindles.
There once were close to 4 MILLION sanctioned bowlers. Now we're down to what, 1.5 million sanctioned bowlers? That's close to a 2/3 reduction in bowlers, so a comparable refuction in funding, yet you expect the USBC to still be able to operate at the same levels?
C'mon man, you're smarter than that.
Now don't get me wrong, I don't WANT a dues increase either, but I do feel like we are getting to the point where bowling is either going to become an unregulated activity with few "safeguards" for its participants if something isnt done.
When the original ABC was formed, they took a highly unregulated sport with diferent standards and playing rules from one area to the next, and turned it into a real sport with real standards and real rules in order to, as best possible, ensure that all bowlers EVERYWHERE were playing the same game.
When I started bowling, the fee was $5.00, but there was 4 million of us, so that was $20,000,000 in the 1980's. Now it is down to 1.5 million at $10.00, so that is $15,000,000 in 2016 dollars. Thats $5,000,000 dollars less and 30 years of inflation later, and you still expect the same "bang for your bucks"? Where else are you going to find that?
How about your car? In 1982, you could get a small car for around $5,000-$6,000 dollars, but not today. That same car will run you $15,00-$20,000 now. (Nissan Sentra)
How about housing? Food? Clothing? ANYTHING? Geez, even bowling balls were only $75 for a top of the line model, now they costs over $200 in many cases, yet we pay that happily.
Bowlers. We've got to be some of the cheapest people on the planet. And whiney too.