The Palm Beach Post

Review of federal water rule may benefit Trump’s courses

- Associated Press

GAINESVILL­E — President Donald Trump’s recent executive order calling for a review of a rule protecting small bodies of water from pollution and developmen­t is strongly supported by golf course owners who are wary of being forced into expensive cleanups on their fairways.

It just so happens that Trump’s business holdings include a dozen golf courses in the United States, and critics say his executive order is par for the course: yet another unseemly conflict of interest that would result in a benefit to Trump properties if it goes through.

“This conflict is disturbing and his failure to completely step away from his business raises questions about his White House actions,” said Scott Amey, general counsel for the Project on Government Oversight.

Trump’s order targets a U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency rule — released under former President Barack Obama in 2015 — that designates many smaller creeks and wetlands as protected under the Clean Water Act of 1972.

Environmen­talists, and some hunting and fishing groups, say keeping those humble waterways intact and clean is essential to the larger downstream waters they feed.

Golf course owners like Trump oppose the Obama rules, arguing that water features on golf courses would be covered and thus subjected to costly controls and possible fines for violating pollution limits.

Among the 17 golf courses Trump owns around the world, three are in Florida, including two in Palm Beach County: Trump Internatio­nal Golf Club in West Palm Beach and Trump National Golf Club in Jupiter. He also owns golf properties in Scotland, Ireland, California and North Carolina.

Trump had railed against the Obama rule during his campaign, slamming it as an example of federal overreach. In signing the executive order Feb. 28, Trump derided the Obama rule as a “very destructiv­e and horrible rule” and an example of federal regulation that “has truly run amok.”

Bob Helland, a lobbyist for the Golf Course Superinten­dents Associatio­n of America, said there are more than 161,000 acres of streams, ponds and wetlands on golf courses around the nation that he argues would be covered under the Obama administra­tion rule. He said the cost of dealing with that is the group’s concern, and that he didn’t think Trump’s involvemen­t was an issue.

“I t ’s n o t a b o u t t h e Tr u mp administra­tion doing something to benefit themselves,” Helland said. “We’ve been opposed to the rule from the start because we think every drainage area or pond would be subject to oversight.” The administra­tion did not respond to requests for comment.

Trump’s order to “rescind or revise” the rule could take years. The Obama rule is tied up in court and hasn’t even taken effect yet, and legal experts say the Trump administra­tion will have to draft its rule while seeking to have the myriad court challenges against the existing rule thrown out.

 ?? BRUCE R. BENNETT / THE PALM BEACH POST 2001 ?? Donald Trump plays a practice round at Trump Internatio­nal Golf Club in West Palm Beach in October 2001. Trump, now the president, owns a dozen golf courses in the United States, including two in Palm Beach County.
BRUCE R. BENNETT / THE PALM BEACH POST 2001 Donald Trump plays a practice round at Trump Internatio­nal Golf Club in West Palm Beach in October 2001. Trump, now the president, owns a dozen golf courses in the United States, including two in Palm Beach County.

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