Thanks for the article, Adam. I didn't know that Doc sold land to the other guy. I think I understand the context of the issue now.
Basically, it looks like a bureaucrat chairman of the School Land Trust is playing power games on the back of Doc Trimble and the others trying to make this remarkable golf course project a success.
It would seem they have a standoff. The overlook to the Snake river canyon - NW of the Doc's land is beautiful and all. But, if there is no golf course, I doubt there is any market for folks to build multiple housing. I guess it would be prime for one or two "ranchettes" of 320 acres or more, with nice central houses descretely placed because of the view and proximity to the beautiful canyon. But, I can't see a bunch of folk building there absent a primary draw of a public-private golf course of world class drawing power. Folks that would put just one or two ranchettes there without the golf course - because they love the land would not likely site them in such a way that is contrary to their interests, and junk-up the views and pristine nature of that section.
But, with a public course, or even a private one, I would be worried that folks would try to condo out or somehow build multi-unit housing. That would really crap the whole thing up.
What a shame. Maybe the obstacle to the golf course development is a blessing in disguise. Maybe, with all the other stuff happening and speculated in the golf arena in the sand hills, it is over done already. It seems to me, if there is no golf course, and thus no interest to develop the school trust land, then we would hope it stays undeveloped and used as ranch-grazing land as always. There are 100s of thousands of acres in the SHs for other courses. Maybe none left with quite the unique beauty as the Doc's overlooking the cap rocks of the Snake canyon.
But, take a place like BallyNeal. It has no river canyon, just great chop hills. The absence of a secondary view and nature attraction isn't going to hurt that effort one bit.
Maybe there are still politics to be played. Maybe a counter effort to get some sort of legislation like a 25 year moratorium to not allowing any bridging over the snake, thus killing access to that school land from that road would help. Or, moratorium on rezoning it to anything to do with residential. It sure would be nice if the State came in and just declared the school section a nature conservatory or something, no chance for development.
The sad thing is that it seems the school trust intentions are opportunistic and predicated on the Doc's initiatives. But, the Doc approached his project specifically with reasons that he wanted to craft a "long term" solution to the preservation of as much of the area as possible. That meant finding a way to parcel off a small section to a revenue generating enterprise, the golf project. I think the Doc had the long term in mind, the school district and the bureaucrats have nothing but opportunism as their intentions to fund their trust as an empire builder, and not all that effective of school tax relief.