The RPD Frog&Snake Extinction Plan Update
22 October 2008 - 18:02, Tinman said
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The San Francisco Recreation and Parks Department (RPD) is just about to wind up its “Golf Task Force” at the final meeting October 29. And what been the result of this nearly year-long comedy?
The RPD will forward up its chain-of-command the golf course plan as its official “conclusion”. Appended to this plan — no doubt in very small print — will be an RPD-edited version of the “public comments” it heard via the Task Force meetings. However, the meetings had no impact on the report’s content per se nor in the RPD’s decision to approve it wholesale. The meetings only served to provide a layer of lipstick to this pig.
Not that this was a particular surprise; this is how these types of “public comment” processes always work in San Francisco.
But in this case, it is quite clear that major forces — presumably the Mayor and some of the Supervisors along with their buddies in the corporate golf world — knew what they wanted, and the RPD had to deliver. San Francisco is to remain a golf-friendly place particularly hospitable to the private golf management firms that will take over the courses from the City. And the Sharp Park golf course is to be completely revamped as part of a huge development deal that will remake Pacifica into a conference/resort center.
There are many problems with the plan, but we’re concerned here primarily with Sharp Park. As we’ve previously pointed out, having a golf course at Sharp Park never made much sense and it certainly makes no sense now. It runs head-on into inherent obstacles: common sense and the law.
- The location is at or below sea level and flooding is a huge problem now — and this will only increase in the future with climate change induced sea level rises and worsening storm surges — since the “plan” doesn’t include a mechanism for suspending the law of gravity.
- The entire basin is habitat for the endangered San Francisco garter snake and the red-legged frog, and the continued operation of the course violates both the federal Endangered Species Act and the California Fully Protected Species Act.
The RPD and its consultants claim that there is no conflict between golf and endangered species. At the last Task Force meeting, the golf course architect actually asserted that “golf is good for endangered species”, incredibly enough. They make these assertions with no supporting evidence, whereas there is clear evidence that the RPD has committed illegal “take” of both snake and frog. This point will soon be the focus of the court cases during the next phase of this issue. Then the RPD will get to see how well its glib dismissal of these environmental concerns plays.
The Sharp Park golf course’s location and frequently drowned status directly refute the absurd claim by RPD and other supporters that this course must be preserved as historically significant because it was designed by Alister Mackenzie. Whatever the merits of other courses he created, Sharp Park is clear evidence of his failings. Four of the original holes have already washed out to sea, and six others have been substantively re-engineered because of problems with their layout. Mackenzie wouldn’t even recognize this course if he walked it today — nor would he be able to get the permits to build it now. Sharp Park is simply the wrong place for a golf course no matter who originally designed it.
Pacifica residents have been particularly vocal about their objections to losing their inexpensive access to golf at Sharp Park; now they pay only the “resident” rate charged San Franciscans. But there are no revenue transfers from Pacifica to San Francisco to offset this bargain, so San Francisco taxpayers are subsidizing every round of golf played by every Pacifica resident to the tune of $15-20 at a time when San Francisco city services are being cut due to a nearly half billion budget deficit.
The RPD has provided a number of other sources of irritation during this “process”:
- They capriciously and frequently canceled meetings of the Task Force, and scheduled what meetings it did conduct at times when it knew certain members could not attend.
- They supplied the Task Force with expurgated, incomplete, confused and confusing data — when it didn’t simply refuse to provide information at all — even in defiance of Sunshine Ordinance requests.
- They hid from their consultant the Management Audit of the RPD — specifically the Golf Fund section that provided key data about one of the contested issues — the current level of use of San Francisco’s golf courses.
So this entire process has been a complete shambles. Unfortunately, it appears that no City “jobs for life” employees will get fired over it. But here’s what is going to happen next.
- The RPD will forward the consultants plan (with public comment in tiny footnotes) to the Rec&Parks Commission where the commissioners will (maybe) wake up long enough to glance at the cover, check how the Mayor wants them to vote, and then approve it.
- The plan will then proceed to the Board of Supervisors next spring during Budget Season, when the question will be whether the Golf Fans on the BOS will prevail over the Supes who don’t care one way or another. All will become confused in a blizzard of mostly specious numbers, much arm-waving will occur, “public process” will be committed, and then…
- Mostly likely, the plan will be moved forward with at most a few minor modifications.
And at that point — when the City of San Francisco attempts to start remaking the Sharp Park golf course — things will heat up a great deal:
- The proceedings will move to new venues — to administrative hearings before the US Fish and Wildlife Service, the California Department of Fish and Game, and the California Coastal Commission. And most importantly, the Sharp Park golf course will find itself in the courtroom — where the City of San Francisco will be sued for illegal take of endangered species, among other grounds.
- This phase will be protracted, prolonged, immensely expensive for the City — and ultimately the City will lose.
En route we’ll see several other developments:
- The RPD will get to defend its refusal to release information before the Sunshine Commission.
- The RPD will then get to see what it’s like to comply with other, larger jurisdictions’ process instead of devising its own rigged, bogus process.
- The Mayor and the Supervisors will get to learn how happy their taxpayer constituents are to lose street cleaning and other city services in order to pay $15-20 for EACH ROUND OF GOLF PLAYED BY EACH PACIFICA RESIDENT at Sharp Park.
- The Mayor will get to see how well pushing this “endangered snake and frog extinction plan” in his parks aids his race for the Governor’s mansion.
The ironic tragedy of all this is that there is a vastly superior alternative that would have avoided all this. Sharp Park could be restored as a world-class environmental center with a hiking/nature trail system, education program, and camping facilities. Such a plan would
- Respond to the number one public priory for public parks: hiking trails
- Allow diversion of golf operational dollars from a failed underwater golf course to other higher-altitude courses that can be made more affordable, accessible, and playable.
- Avoid the long and expensive legal ordeal that the City is headed for.
But instead, the RPD has steered the City of San Francisco into treacherous rapids. This long and dangerous ride is only beginning.
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