I understand your point and I with you know that the sandbagging is coming.
So lets say USBC were to agree with you and try to implement this and take some percentage of money (5-10% or whatever it is) to boost the open division as you suggest.
And lets say you are a true 190 average bowler now considering bowling the tournament because you now feel you have a fair chance against mostly equal ability bowlers (sandbaggers aside).
And you read, that if the open division does not have enough entries (this is an entry driven tournament), then prize money from another division may be reallocated to the open division to:
??
How would USBC word this in any manner that if you were the 190 bowler, you aren't going to say forget it and not enter?
You say you run a business, isn't what you are asking for sort of like saying, hey can you kick in an extra 10% of your profits because the business next door isn't quite making as much money because they don't get as much business as you because their market is smaller?
What I am afraid you will see if even less entries that the 39% after Vegas. Why, well, the 210-219 bowlers would enter and hope to clean up in brackets against the 181-209s. With those gone, the 210-219 are now the small fish for the 220+ and some of them have already posted, they are not going to bowl or are rethinking it.
And just FYI - the new PBA rule is everyone can bowl, just no more than 1 PBA title holder on a team, or doubles unless you are older than 60.
So the big example that everyone is upset about: Mark McDowell and Mike Shady both earned titles back in the 80s-90s. They have been bowling the tournament together with Jeff Richgels for almost 20 years now. Both are in their 50s now. They can no longer bowl together on the team and dbls due to the new rule until one of them turns 60.