Chicago Sun-Times

IN THE ROUGH, BUT STAYING THE COURSE

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter:@ fspielman

Despite lacking money and support, city park district chief not giving up on South Side golf course merger

Chicago Park District Superinten­dent Mike Kelly acknowledg­ed Thursday he lacks both the money and support to merge the Jackson Park and South Shore golf courses into a championsh­ip- caliber course — but he won’t give up on the $ 30 million project.

“We’re still looking for community support. We’re still looking for financial support. The money still has to be raised. I don’t have it yet. But hopefully, I will — through transparen­cy, hard work, and showing people the benefits of it,” Kelly said Thursday.

“The community wants to see the golf plans, the routing. I said we will commit to that. I also committed to publishing the plan during the first quarter [ of 2018]. I’m gonna have to have some golf meetings in the first quarter to get that plan published.” The Chicago Sun- Times reported in early March that the merger, which gained momentum when former President Barack Obama chose Jackson Park for his presidenti­al center, had hit a fundraisin­g snag, derailing Kelly’s plan to begin constructi­on last spring.

The merger has since stirred even more controvers­y because the design — by a firm owned by Tiger Woods — would require closing Marquette Drive, building a pair of new underpasse­s, displacing tennis courts and relocating the South Shore Nature Sanctuary to make way for a new 12th hole.

On Thursday, Kelly acknowledg­ed the cost of the underpasse­s alone — at 67th Street and South Shore Drive and at Jeffery Boulevard and 66th Street — is $ 30 million.

That would match the $ 30 million price tag for the new course, with $ 6 million of that coming from Chicago taxpayers. But the superinten­dent argued that the underpasse­s — and the closing of Marquette Drive between Cornell and Lake Shore Drive — are needed, with or without the merger.

“The traffic study says they do need to close Mar- quette. I love it because I get more green space back. And don’t you want people to get to the lakefront on the South Side as well as the North Side? I want the underpasse­s, regardless of golf. That’s good for the city and good for the South Side,” Kelly said.

“If not now, when? We’ve been talking about this since 1999. And the fact that we still have golf carts crossing Jeffrey is insane. That needs to be improved. That’s a transporta­tion project.”

Ever since the golf course layout was unveiled, Jackson Park residents have demanded to know where the treasured bird and butterfly preserve will be relocated to make way for the new 12th hole and how that work would be paid for.

On Thursday, Kelly was asked that question yet again.

He would only say: “I absolutely believe we’ll have a better footprint for nature when we’re done than when we started. You have to remember all the land we own south of Rainbow Beach. We own hundreds of acres. I believe we’ll have more natural area on the site than when we started.”

 ??  ?? Mike Kelly
Mike Kelly
 ??  ?? The Chicago Park District wants to merge the Jackson Park ( shown) and South Shore golf courses. SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO
The Chicago Park District wants to merge the Jackson Park ( shown) and South Shore golf courses. SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO

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