I'm with Evan, I call Shenanigans.
This is CRAZY. So crazy in, fact that it can't be real. The financial decision alone is nuts, but beyond that, what does it say about the decision making process and priorities of the EPA?
My father has made a career out risk assessment around formerly polluted sites. Think paint factories, underground oil storage tanks, etc. Real Erin Brokovich type stuff. And he says that there are literally thousands of sites where the cost of remediation is more than 10X the value that could ever be extracted from the land, so they just sit there. Some of these sites get superfund status and get cleaned up, but not all of them, and basically, we're just forced to live with the risk. With all those sites, where there's literally cancer-causing, life altering, baby deforming junk in the ground, I can't imagine why THIS golf course is worth $5.5 million to preserve.
Have they just set the market floor for every golf course in the country? If you can't make a go of it as a golf course, did this just set the market floor for every other 200 acre piece of property?
I buy that there's a river flowing through it. But what's upstream and downstream of the river. My guess is that in NE Ohio, there are a few of those brownfield waste areas from manufacturing plants that are far more damaging to that river than the golf course.