235
Montgomery St., #400, San Francisco, CA. 94104 * 415-392-5431, ext.
2054 * info@sfpublicgolf.com
March
21, 2011
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
IN RESPONSE TO LAWSUIT AT SHARP PARK
FAVORITE SON KEN VENTURI
URGES SAN FRANCISCO TO SAVE THE COURSE
SAN FRANCISCO, CA. A lawsuit to enjoin golf operations at Sharp Park Golf Course, filed March 2 in Federal Court here1, is the latest threat to the landmark 80-year-old Alister MacKenzie-designed public links.
And
1964 U.S. Open Champion Ken Venturi, honorary chairman of the San
Francisco Public Golf Alliance, is fighting to save the historic
course. “It
is unthinkable that San Francisco would seriously contemplate
destroying Alister MacKenzie’s masterwork,” says Venturi, a San
Francisco native who learned his golf at Sharp Park and the city’s
other public courses. “So I urge my friends and fellow golfers to
preserve Dr. MacKenzie’s legacy, and defend it with your time, your
money, and your passion. Do not let anybody destroy Sharp Park.”2
Designated
an at-risk nationally-significant cultural landscape by the
Washington D.C.-based Cultural Landscape Foundation3,
Sharp Park is a San Francisco municipal course located in that city’s
southern coastal suburb of Pacifica, in San Mateo County. Opened in
1932, the popular, reasonably-priced course is one of only a handful
of public courses in the world—-and the only public seaside
links--designed by Dr. MacKenzie, acclaimed as one of history’s
greatest golf architects.4
Since 2008, environmentalist groups led by the Tucson-based Center for Biological Diversity (“CBD”) have campaigned to force San Francisco to close the golf course and convert it to a nature sanctuary for the endangered San Francisco garter snake and California red-legged frog. "Nobody in San Francisco cares about Sharp Park,” says attorney Brent Plater, who has spearheaded the campaign for CBD and its spinoff group, Wild Equity Institute. “If that golf course were to fall into the ocean tomorrow, nobody would blink an eye.”5
Ken Venturi could not disagree more. “Sharp Park is a great course of the old school... a seaside course that connects golfers to the Scottish public course roots of the game,” Venturi says. “It is Dr. MacKenzie’s great gift to the American public golfer.”6
To Mr. Plater’s apparent surprise, a whole lot of people agree with Venturi. A broad coalition of multi-ethnic public golfers7,8, senior citizens9, preservation advocates10, organized labor11, civic organizations12, the Pacifica City Council13, the San Mateo County Board of Supervisors14, state and world golf organizations15, 12th District Congresswoman Jackie Speier16, and the Editorial Board of the San Francisco Chronicle17 are calling for preservation of the 18-hole Sharp Park course.
The San Francisco Recreation and Park Department in April, 2009 adopted a Sharp Park Endangered Species Compliance Plan18, specifying organic and other eco-friendly golf course maintenance practices. It seems to be working, because so far in 2011, Sharp Park has recorded a record-high crop of new red-legged frog eggs.18
In 2009, the Recreation and Park Department retained the preeminent frog and snake scientist at Sharp Park to develop a plan coordinating with ongoing habitat enhancement at the Golden Gate National Recreation Area’s adjacent Mori Point park. After a six-month study, consulting biologist Karen Swaim and project director Tetra-Tech Inc. concluded that retaining and modifying the 18-hole golf course was not only compatible with enhanced frog and snake habitat20, but also several million dollars less expensive than turning the property into an exclusive frog and snake sanctuary.21,22
In December, 2009, after extensive public hearings, the Recreation and Park Department’s citizens' advisory committee recommended23--and the Park Commissioners adopted24--a compromise plan to improve natural habitat, while keeping the golf course open. The plan won the support of the Sierra Club chapter in San Mateo County 25, and is currently undergoing environmental review, which is not expected to be complete until late 2011 or early 2012.
In June and July, 2010, CBD and its allies pressed their case in the San Francisco Supervisors’ annual budget hearings. But after several public hearings, the Supervisors, too, rejected CBD’s anti-golf campaign.2
In October, 2010 and January, 2011, over objections from CBD and its allies, the San Francisco Public Utilities and Recreation and Park Commissions gave final approvals to an $8 million recycled water irrigation project for Sharp Park Golf Course.27 Groundbreaking was held in February, 2011, and construction is now underway. Also in February, 2011, a “working group” comprised of representatives of the cities of San Francisco and Pacifica, San Mateo County, and the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, reached mutual agreement that a plan could be developed to retain the 18-hole golf course, while protecting the frogs and snakes.28,29
Following this string of political set-backs, CBD and Wild Equity on March 2, 2011 filed their lawsuit in Federal Court in San Francisco,30 asking the Court to order a halt to golf and maintenance activities at Sharp Park.31 Among other things, the Complaint alleges that fairway mowers, fertilizers, gopher traps, flood control pumping, and golf carts kill protected frogs and snakes, in violation of the Endangered Species Act. CBD has been making similar claims since 2008. No trial date is set. A former CBD staff lawyer and founder of Wild Equity, Mr. Plater is identified on the Complaint as the Plaintiffs’ attorney.
“The lawsuit rehashes the narrow and unreasonable claims of golf opponents who have not yet acknowledged the valid interests of historic preservation, working-class golfers, local businesses, neighbors, and the governmental bodies that have considered all sides of the public debate and are looking for a win/win solution,” says Sharp Park Business Women’s Club member and Public Golf Alliance spokeswoman Lauren Barr. “When all the facts are considered, we expect that CBD’s lawsuit will have no more success closing the golf course than their political efforts.”
Sharp Park is the most affordable 18-hole golf course in the San Francisco Bay Area.32 So it is a key to Bay Area public golf, according to San Francisco favorite son Venturi. “Without the public courses, golf becomes inaccessible,” he says. “Without them, the game shrivels and dies.”
“Reasonably-priced public golf for all different kinds of people can and should coexist with the frogs, snakes, and nature, as they have all coexisted at Sharp Park for decades,” Venturi says. Golfers are optimists. Venturi thinks the Court will agree.
Since 2008, environmentalist groups led by the Tucson-based Center for Biological Diversity (“CBD”) have campaigned to force San Francisco to close the golf course and convert it to a nature sanctuary for the endangered San Francisco garter snake and California red-legged frog. "Nobody in San Francisco cares about Sharp Park,” says attorney Brent Plater, who has spearheaded the campaign for CBD and its spinoff group, Wild Equity Institute. “If that golf course were to fall into the ocean tomorrow, nobody would blink an eye.”5
Ken Venturi could not disagree more. “Sharp Park is a great course of the old school... a seaside course that connects golfers to the Scottish public course roots of the game,” Venturi says. “It is Dr. MacKenzie’s great gift to the American public golfer.”6
To Mr. Plater’s apparent surprise, a whole lot of people agree with Venturi. A broad coalition of multi-ethnic public golfers7,8, senior citizens9, preservation advocates10, organized labor11, civic organizations12, the Pacifica City Council13, the San Mateo County Board of Supervisors14, state and world golf organizations15, 12th District Congresswoman Jackie Speier16, and the Editorial Board of the San Francisco Chronicle17 are calling for preservation of the 18-hole Sharp Park course.
The San Francisco Recreation and Park Department in April, 2009 adopted a Sharp Park Endangered Species Compliance Plan18, specifying organic and other eco-friendly golf course maintenance practices. It seems to be working, because so far in 2011, Sharp Park has recorded a record-high crop of new red-legged frog eggs.18
In 2009, the Recreation and Park Department retained the preeminent frog and snake scientist at Sharp Park to develop a plan coordinating with ongoing habitat enhancement at the Golden Gate National Recreation Area’s adjacent Mori Point park. After a six-month study, consulting biologist Karen Swaim and project director Tetra-Tech Inc. concluded that retaining and modifying the 18-hole golf course was not only compatible with enhanced frog and snake habitat20, but also several million dollars less expensive than turning the property into an exclusive frog and snake sanctuary.21,22
In December, 2009, after extensive public hearings, the Recreation and Park Department’s citizens' advisory committee recommended23--and the Park Commissioners adopted24--a compromise plan to improve natural habitat, while keeping the golf course open. The plan won the support of the Sierra Club chapter in San Mateo County 25, and is currently undergoing environmental review, which is not expected to be complete until late 2011 or early 2012.
In June and July, 2010, CBD and its allies pressed their case in the San Francisco Supervisors’ annual budget hearings. But after several public hearings, the Supervisors, too, rejected CBD’s anti-golf campaign.2
In October, 2010 and January, 2011, over objections from CBD and its allies, the San Francisco Public Utilities and Recreation and Park Commissions gave final approvals to an $8 million recycled water irrigation project for Sharp Park Golf Course.27 Groundbreaking was held in February, 2011, and construction is now underway. Also in February, 2011, a “working group” comprised of representatives of the cities of San Francisco and Pacifica, San Mateo County, and the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, reached mutual agreement that a plan could be developed to retain the 18-hole golf course, while protecting the frogs and snakes.28,29
Following this string of political set-backs, CBD and Wild Equity on March 2, 2011 filed their lawsuit in Federal Court in San Francisco,30 asking the Court to order a halt to golf and maintenance activities at Sharp Park.31 Among other things, the Complaint alleges that fairway mowers, fertilizers, gopher traps, flood control pumping, and golf carts kill protected frogs and snakes, in violation of the Endangered Species Act. CBD has been making similar claims since 2008. No trial date is set. A former CBD staff lawyer and founder of Wild Equity, Mr. Plater is identified on the Complaint as the Plaintiffs’ attorney.
“The lawsuit rehashes the narrow and unreasonable claims of golf opponents who have not yet acknowledged the valid interests of historic preservation, working-class golfers, local businesses, neighbors, and the governmental bodies that have considered all sides of the public debate and are looking for a win/win solution,” says Sharp Park Business Women’s Club member and Public Golf Alliance spokeswoman Lauren Barr. “When all the facts are considered, we expect that CBD’s lawsuit will have no more success closing the golf course than their political efforts.”
Sharp Park is the most affordable 18-hole golf course in the San Francisco Bay Area.32 So it is a key to Bay Area public golf, according to San Francisco favorite son Venturi. “Without the public courses, golf becomes inaccessible,” he says. “Without them, the game shrivels and dies.”
“Reasonably-priced public golf for all different kinds of people can and should coexist with the frogs, snakes, and nature, as they have all coexisted at Sharp Park for decades,” Venturi says. Golfers are optimists. Venturi thinks the Court will agree.
#
# # #
Contacts:
Richard
Harris
415-290-5718
(cell)
Bo
Links
415-509-4133
(cell)
1
San Francisco Chronicle, “Sharp
Park Sued Over Red Legged Frog,”
2
Letter, Ken Venturi, Oct. 12,
2009:
http://www.sfpublicgolf.com/AnnouncementRetrieve.aspx?ID=30804
3
Cultural Landscape Foundation,
Washington, D.C., July, 2009:
http://www.tclf.org/landslides/sharp-park-golf-course-threatened-closure
4
MacKenzie
designed several of the world’s most famous courses, including
Augusta National (home of the annual Masters Tournament), Cypress
Point Club, and Australia’s Royal Melbourne. See Footnote 3,
above.
6
Letter, Ken Venturi, Oct. 12,
2009: See Footnote 2, above.
7
Rochelle Metcalfe, “I Heard
That,” Beyond Chron (Tenderloin Housing Clinic), June 30, 2010:
http://www.beyondchron.org/articles/_I_Heard_That_Riley_Jameison_Golf_Tournament_at_Sharp_Park__8275.html
9
Letter, John Major, Sons in
Retirement, June 2, 2009:
10
Cultural Landscape Foundation,
Washington, D.C.: See Footnote 3, above.
Laborers’
Union Local 261, Testimony of Zac Salem, Chair, Golf Committee, to
Board of Supervisors’ Govt. Audit & Oversight Committee, Dec.
16, 2009, S.F. Govt. TV, at 2:17:30:
http://sanfrancisco.granicus.com/ViewPublisher.php?view_id=11
12
Pacifica Chamber of Commerce,
undated letter from Don Eagleston, CEO:
http://sharppark.savegolf.net/data/ChamberSupportSP.pdf
13
City of Pacifica, Resolution
of City Council, December 10, 2007:
http://sharppark.savegolf.net/data/cop_res.pdf
14
County of San Mateo,
Resolution of Board of Supervisors, December 18, 2007:
http://sharppark.savegolf.net/data/smbos_res.pdf
15
California
Alliance for Golf, letter, September 28, 2009:
World
Golf Foundation, letter, July 23, 2009:
Alister
MacKenzie Society of Great Britain and Ireland, letter, April 28,
2009:
http://www.pacificariptide.com/.a/6a00d8341c795b53ef01156f6f286c970c-pi
18
Sharp Park Endangered Species
Compliance Plan:
ABC
TV Channel 7 News, March 4, 2011, “San Francisco Sued Over
Red-legged Frog” (quoting Recreation and Park Department Natural
Areas Coordinator Lisa Wayne):
http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/video?id=7993834
20
Public hearing testimony of
consulting biologist Karen Swain, at Board of Supervisors Government
Audit and Oversight Committee, Dec. 16, 2009:
http://coastsider.com/index.php/site/news/4187/
Sharp
Park Conceptual Restoration Alternatives Report, November,
2009, Tetra Tech, Inc., at pp. 3-5, 52-55, and Tables 4 and 5.
22
By contrast, an “essential
concept” of the alternate plan advocated by CBD and Wild Equity to
close the golf course, calls for over- or under-passing the
150-yard-wide Highway One and frontage roads where they bisect the
course, so that frogs and snakes could migrate from the ocean to the
hills east of the golf course. Conceptual
Ecosystem Restoration Plan and Feasibility Assessment: Laguna
Salada, Pacifica, CA., Prepared for Wild Equity Institute, Center
for Biological Diversity, by ESA PWA, Feb.
9, 2011, pp. 26-27 at pgh. 6.1, and pp. 36-37 at pgh. 6.7. A link
to that report is found on Wild Equity’s press release:
http://wildequity.org/entries/3146.
The plan’s authors did not provide design, feasibility, or cost
estimates for their freeway modification ideas, other than referring
to the Doyle Drive project, currently undergoing reconstruction to
connect San Francisco to the Golden Gate Bridge. Id.,
at pp. 29-30. Doyle Drive cost estimates exceed $1 Billion.
http://www.presidioparkway.org/about/funding.aspx
23
PROSAC, Resolutions [Nos. 1 and
2], adopted by votes of 14-1 and 13-2 on Dec. 1, 2009, submitted to
Rec & Park Commission on Dec. 3, 2009:
24
San Francisco Recreation and
Park Commission Resolution No. 0912-018,
Agenda
Item No. 11, adopted by unanimous 6-0 vote, December 17, 2009:
http://sf-recpark.org/index.aspx?page=965
25
Testimony of Merrill Bobele,
co-chair, Coastal Issues Committee, Loma Prieta Chapter, Sierra
Club, to SF Board of Supervisors’ Govt. Audit & Oversight
Committee, Dec. 16, 2009, S.F. Govt. TV, at 3:11:37:
http://sanfrancisco.granicus.com/ViewPublisher.php?view_id=11
26
Pacifica Riptide, July 21,
2010, “SF Supervisors Spare Sharp Park Golf Course”:
http://www.pacificariptide.com/pacifica_riptide/2010/07/sf-supervisors-spare-sharp-park-golf-course.html
27
San Mateo County Times, “Sharp
Park Recycled Water Project Gets Green Light,” January 24, 2011:
28
San Francisco Recreation and
Park Department, Press Release, “A Vision for Sharp Park Comes
into Focus,” Feb. 23, 2011:
http://sfrecpark.org/ThePressRoom.aspx
29
Sharp Park Working Group
Statement and List of Findings, Feb. 23, 2011 (at finding h):
http://sfrecpark.org/documents/SHARPPARKWORKINGGROUPSTATEMENTANDLISTOFFINDINGS.pdf
30
Wild Equity Institute,
Center for Biological Diversity, et Al. vs. City and County of San
Francisco, et Al., U.S.
District Court, N.D.Cal., No. CV 11-0958LB, Complaint filed March 2,
2011:
http://pacifica.patch.com/articles/environmentalists-sue-san-francisco-over-alleged-epa-violations-at-sharp-park-golf-course#pdf-5103580
31
Although listed among a handful
of environmental groups as plaintiffs in the lawsuit, the Sierra
Club in a March 3, 2011 letter from Deputy Executive Director Bruce
Hamilton, clarified its position: “... the Sierra Club has not
specifically endorsed removal of the golf course. Saving the
animals’ habitat may require the city to remove the golf course,
or the city may find a way to run the facility while protecting the
habitat. We will be satisfied with whichever course of action truly
ensures the survival of these important species.” Pacifica
Riptide, March 3,
2011, “Sierra Club Clarifies its Position on Sharp Park”:
http://www.pacificariptide.com/pacifica_riptide/2011/03/sierra-club-clarifies-its-position-on-sharp-park.html
32
The prime-time weekend greens
fees of $28 for San Francisco and Pacifica residents and $41 for
non-residents, is less than half the fees at two of the three other
public 18-hole courses in San Mateo County, whose 2009 population
was 719,000, according to the U.S. Census Bureau:
http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/06/06081.html
No comments:
Post a Comment