Audio By Carbonatix
It’s no secret that Florida’s in a bit of trouble. Our people are
miserable, our interwebs are clogged with sluts, we’ve lost our houses,
and we’re broke. And what’ll turn it around? Golf!
At the urging of our golf-crazy gazillionaire governor and his trusted
advisor, Jack “The Golden Bear” Nicklaus, State Rep. Pat Rooney (R.,
West Palm Beach) and Sen. John Thrasher (R., Jacksonville) have unveiled
House Bill 1239 and Senate Bill 1846, respectively, which authorize the
building of ten golf courses across the state. Who will pay for them?
You will! And where will they go? Smack-dab in the middle of state parks!
Assuming The Orlando Sentinel’s right with its chronology, and there’s no reason to suppose it’s not, here’s what went down:
Jack “The Golden Bear” Nicklaus, the former golfing great and long-time
resident of Palm Beach County, recently sat down for a little chat about
economic stimulus with Governor Scott. Nicklaus suggested that golf
might be a partial cure for Florida’s economic woes. After all, golf has
done wonders for Jack Nicklaus’s economy. Why not share the love?
After the meeting with Scott, Nicklaus took his embryonic economic
initiative to Rep. Rooney. Why Rooney? Well, Rooney represents Palm
Beach County, which has been Mr. Nicklaus’s home for many years — and Rep. Rooney chairs the Palm Beach County Golf Association. A sympathetic soul!
What happened next is a little foggier — how the notion was passed from
Rooney to Thrasher will, I hope, become clearer in the coming days.
What is known is this: We now have two bills before us that suggest
bulldozing what looks like approximately 2,000 acres of state parkland
for ten golf courses — all designed, according to the bill, by Jack
Nicklaus himself. (He has a nice sideline as a golf course developer.)
And what will this Linkage Archipelago be called? “The Jack Nicklaus
Golf Trail of Florida.”
The construction is supposed to be eco-friendly, but that promise comes
wrapped in a whole mess of ominous portents. According to 1239:
Each public golf facility shall include, at minimum, an
18-hole public golf course, a practice area, a clubhouse with limited
food and parking, and a golf course maintenance building. The public
golf facility shall be designed and built in an environmentally
sensitive manner and be open to the general public. The public golf
facility may include a hotel to enhance the benefit to the tourism
industry.
Didja catch that? House Bill is 2,203 words long, and this is its only
concession to Florida’s long-suffering ecoystems — and it’s sandwiched
between a parking lot and a hotel.
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