A proposal to convert sections of several protected Florida State Parks to golf courses, lodges and other non-traditional park amenities has started to garner plenty of opposition after the surprise âGreat Outdoors Initiativeâ was announced on August 19 by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection.
The most eye-popping changes might be the introduction of 45 holes of golf to Jonathan Dickinson State Park, an 11,500-acre park in Martin County near Jupiter in southeast Florida that features sandy dunes â the kind of land frequently coveted by golf developers.
The Department of Environmental Protection released the plans on social media after they were initially leaked. With no detailed description of the golf plans, a map included in the official release shows the proposed courses (shown in pink below).
Equally eye-popping is that the proposals appear to many observers to have come out of thin air, with no public input in the development of plans to this point. U.S. Rep. Brian Mast, R-Palm City, a staunch environmental defender of the nearby St. Lucie River, told The Palm Beach Post that park proposals came without any forewarning.
âNobody that I spoke to in government had heard literally one thing about this,â Mast said during an interview at Jonathan Dickinson on Thursday. âEveryone was taken by surprise.â
After several days of silence, Florida Governor Ron DeSantisâs spokesman responded to criticism this week with statements on social media indicating the proposed changes are all about public access and utilization of the parks.
âThe Department of Environmental Protection and the Division of Parks are looking at recommendations for ways to enhance Floridaâs parks to make them more visitor-friendly.â
This is not the first time golf was proposed in Jonathan Dickinson State Park. Legislative initiatives in 2011 included a Jack Nicklaus-designed course at the park, but those plans were quickly swept away after substantial public criticism.
There are more than 1,300 golf courses in Florida, which has been dubbed in many marketing efforts as the Golf Capital of the World. The majority of Floridaâs golf courses offer public access.
Florida operates 175 state parks within environments ranging from upland scrub…
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