| Coastal A-Z [return to Table of Contents] Golf Courses - Friend or Foe? |
What do golf courses have to do with Surfrider issues? Do they have any effect on
ocean water quality, coastal access, beach and marine ecology, or beach erosion?
As it turns out, golf courses can have significant environmental impacts. Let's
look at the good, the bad and the ugly regarding golf courses. The Good Golf courses are nice to look at. They can provide habitat for various land and aquatic animals. Wetlands can be incorporated into golf courses, which may provide not only habitat, but also a filtering mechanism for runoff. Golf course areas are primarily non-paved, so they don't add directly to the urban proliferation of impervious surfaces. They may be a more desirable type of development than houses, shopping malls, industry, power plants, or sewage treatment plants. The Bad and the Ugly To develop a golf course, many acres of land may have to be cleared of natural vegetation and habitat, graded, and planted with what is often non-native grasses, trees, and shrubs. All that pretty green grass takes a lot of water, fertilizer, pesticides, herbicides, and fungicides to maintain. The local water supply may or may not be adequate for the required irrigation needs. Chemical use, combined with over-irrigation may cause contamination of groundwater aquifers, surface water bodies, and the ocean. Native plants and animals may be destroyed/driven out. Natural coastal dunes or other coastal features may be covered over. In addition, local streams may be diverted, which may impact freshwater aquatic life and may also interrupt sand supply to the beach. Although wetlands may be created, they may also be destroyed. The golf course may also directly or indirectly block coastal access or take away beach parking. Finally, golf course development often encourages other development, such as housing tracts, restaurants, shopping malls, etc. What can you do? As with any other significant development project, an EIR or EIS (see separate discussion of this topic) should be prepared to evaluate potential environmental impacts before the project is approved. Reviewing and commenting on these documents is an important way to stop or positively influence projects. As an example, members of the Washington and Oregon chapters of Surfrider recently reviewed an EIR for a proposed golf course development in Westport, Washington. Their review identified several serious deficiencies or areas of concern regarding the proposed project. The main areas of concern were:
Are There Better Ways to Site, Design and Maintain Golf Courses? Yes. Golf course designers, owners, and operators are becoming increasingly aware of environmental issues. Several websites have information regarding "green" ways of building and maintaining courses. Even the United States Golf Association (USGA) and the U.S. Air Force have set up programs aimed at establishing environmentally friendly golf courses. The USGA's A Guide to Environmental Stewardship on the Golf Course discusses environmental planning, wildlife and habitat management, chemical use reduction and safety, water conservation and water quality management. Among the principles discussed in this guide and in similar documents are the following:
References Letter to Westport, WA City Council, Comments on Links at Half Moon Bay Master Plan Development by Peter Leon, Markus Mead and Kevin Ranker of Surfrider Foundation, September 3, 2002. SustainableBusiness.com US Golf Association Committed to Green Foundation: (See their publications) Corporations Behaving Badly, "The Lawrence Summers Memorial Award", Multinational Monitor, Volume 23, Number 1 & 2, Jan/Feb 2002 http://multinationalmonitor.org/mm2002/02jan-feb/jan-feb02award.html Fairways in the Rough, by Katherine Esposito, Wisconsin Natural Resources Magazine, August 1998 http://www.wnrmag.com/stories/1998/aug98/golf.htm |