Dan Ament works seven days a week, all summer long, so Minneapolis can play.
He’s a golf course foreman, supervising two of the city’s public golf courses — Hiawatha and Fort Snelling. The terms of his contract require one full-time employee to be on hand at all times at every public golf course. Ament has two golf courses and he’s one of two full-time employees. So.
“We work seven days a week, from the beginning of the season to the end,” said Ament, who maintains two historic courses and 27 holes with the help of 15 part-time seasonal groundskeepers.
When it came time to negotiate a new contract, he and his colleagues asked the Park Board for more full-time help. Management, he said, said no — budgets stretched thin by the pandemic and inflation could not stretch that far.
So on July Fourth, as golfers headed to the greens, Ament headed to the picket line.
“I love what I do. I really don’t want to do anything else,” he said Tuesday, on the sixth day of a planned seven-day strike by Minneapolis park workers. “I love public golf more than anything else, which is why I’m here. I’ve had opportunities to go to other organizations — I’ve turned them all down. … I firmly believe that every single individual should be entitled to great public golf in our state.”
On the picket line in the park, workers in union orange waved “STRIKE” signs in front of the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden. Behind them sat the Spoonbridge and Cherry, that big blue chicken and 11 acres of lovingly landscaped public parkland. A city treasure, maintained by workers who say they’ve been asked to do too much with too little for too long.
In most of Minneapolis, you’re never more than six blocks from a park. Mitchell Clendenen certainly never wanted to be. The parks of his hometown were his playground when he was a child. Now they’re his life’s work.