Volunteers key to Toshiba
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June Casagrande
It takes a village to pull off an event like the Toshiba Senior
Classic -- a village of about 1,000.
They carry the scoreboards. They marshal the crowds. They check
credentials.
Every year, these legions of tournament volunteers do anything and
everything they can to help pull off the biggest local sporting event
of the year.
“It’s amazing how well it all comes together; all the volunteers
do their jobs so well,” said Lloyd Hardee, chairman of volunteer
management for the tournament. “There’s never any chaos. It all
works.”
From a trailer in the sprawling Volunteer Village at the Newport
Beach Country Club, Hardee’s job is to manage the human resources of
about 1,000 others who volunteer at the tournament.
“Everyone who wants to volunteer for the tournament comes through
us,” Hardee said.
Hardee starts by gathering information about the skills, interests
and availability of each prospective volunteer. With that
information, he decides which of the three dozen volunteer committees
at the tournament would be the best fit. For example, those who like
to be out on the golf course and are good at interacting with the
public often get assigned to crowd control as a volunteer marshal.
Marshals represent the biggest volunteer group, with more than 300
marshals working the tournament this year.
Hardee’s first volunteer experiences for Toshiba were in a marshal
position -- a job that earned him some amazing memories, such as
seeing pro John Jacobs hit a hole in one.
“I’ve been a golfer for about 50 years, so I just love being
around it,” he said.
Volunteers who eschew on-the-course action for human interaction
end up in jobs such as uniform distribution. From yet another trailer
in volunteer village, a rotating staff of 10 volunteers distributes
shirts, vests, caps and credentials to every volunteer.
“One of the great things about my committee is we see all of the
volunteers,” said Ron Singer, chairman of uniform distribution. “All
the volunteers have to come through my trailer. ... And I can say
that, almost to a person, they’re some of the most interesting people
you ever want to meet. They’re people you’d want to sit down and talk
to even if you weren’t part of the tournament.”
Volunteering for the tournament is such a fun and rewarding job,
Singer said, that people don’t mind paying for the privilege: All
volunteers must pay for their uniforms and other costs; $59 for
first-time volunteers, $39 for those returning.
“It’s really a great time,” said Singer, a Mission Viejo resident
who has volunteered for 10 years in a row. “There are so many
reasons. The fact that it benefits Hoag Hospital is so important. My
family has loved Hoag Hospital since we’ve been here. It’s exciting
to see who the new players are. Obviously, having Jack Nicklaus here
is exciting. I look forward to this every year.”
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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