My opinion, it's not the dues that's the problem here, it's the membership.
If you want to continue the awards program, dues have to go up. Assuming normal inflation (3.5%/year) for all goods and services, you should expect your dues to double every 20 years.
The USBC has made some missteps, to be sure. I thought the move to Texas was too ambitious. The problem is, if they're not ambitious enough -- meaning, if they won't pay a competitive wage to a CEO or employees -- they're not going to hire anyone worth a d*mn.
The real INTERNAL issue is the membership is getting older, and we do a sorry job as a sport -- and always have -- of transitioning our youth bowlers to adult leagues. You don't find many league bowlers in their 20s in most places. You have your youth programs, then the kids hit 18, go to college and we lose them, then hope to pick them back up after they get out of college. There's a lack of retention there and it kills us. We have to figure out a way to keep them in the sport, whether it's in the way we set up the league schedule, whether we let them bowl for free for those years, whatever it is.
The major EXTERNAL problem, though, is the same thing that hurts our adult leagues: The world has changed in a lot of ways, a big one of them is related to work schedule, and long-format leagues may not be the answer anymore. In addition, we're fighting video games, youth soccer, travel baseball, etc.
In regards to the tournament itself, it's like the other thread that other people got in a screaming match with me over (i.e., the why-it's-always-in-Reno thread): If you keep sending it back to the same place over and over, people get burned out. Don't tell me that the venue always has to be the same size, or we have to have the tournament the same length every year because that's the way it's always been done. I think it's pretty clear we're being forced, as a sport, into thinking outside the box now, and the penalty for not doing so will be the end of our tournament.
The tournament has become more of a vacation thing than a competitive event for a large portion of the field -- both sexes can bowl, you can drink beer during competition just like you were in your league back home, etc. The dual-gender entry is here to stay, but every change these days seems to be about either going more casual, or protecting the format (multi-month, huge lane requirement) over what's fiscally responsible. I'll just lay it out there -- the tournament as we know it will have to change. Some people will get all kinds of pi**ed off about that but they'll have to deal with it.
Jess