Two more stories:
1 -- A terribly confusing and complicated project in 1985 was built partially on preserve desert land that was acquired in a trade in which the park district received more pristine desert land than it was giving. Very wise, yet a hot debate. A lady who lived up against the new course argued at hearings that wildlife would be forced back into the preserve and our "destruction" would cost her her valuable homesite. Two years after the course was built she appeared again, this time pleading with the park district to erect a fence along the golf course "so the damn animals would stop coming down to the golf course and bother her."
2 -- One of my "favorite" arguments against golf development is that "you golf course designers are always building courses above natural rivers and oceans — putting our waterways in harm's way from the chemicals you use..." Well, I ask, "Except for a very few places on our fine earth that are below sea level, where exactly would you suggest that we build golf courses so they are not above oceans and waterways?" And, I also throw in the thought that, "...at least golf courses are managed by licensed, profit-making personnel that apply legal materials according to state laws — there is never room for waste or over-application as no one offers a subsidy for such materials." This, of course, in contrast to agriculture where 14-year-olds can often apply pesticides and 55 gallon drums of chemicals are regularly supplied through government programs.