Times-Call (Longmont)

Topgolf plans worry Audubon

- By Lucas High Bizwest / Prairie Mountain Media

Northern Colorado conservati­on groups have concerns about the proposed Topgolf facility in Timnath, and town officials have ignored offers from the Fort Collins Audubon Society and allied organizati­ons to discuss potential impacts of the project on local bird population­s.

“The attitude that we take is that it’s better to bring up concerns and issues as early as possible in the formal government process before too much time, energy and commitment is made based on a partial view of the issues and a partial view of the facts,”

John Shenot, president of the local Audubon Society chapter that covers Timnath and much of Northern Colorado, told Bizwest.

Conservati­on groups became aware of Dallas-based Topgolf Entertainm­ent Group’s plans to build its popular driving range and entertainm­ent concept at the 240-acre Ladera developmen­t site near the intersecti­on of Harmony Road and Interstate 25 in May after Bizwest published a report on the project using internal Timnath government communicat­ions gathered via a Colorado Open Records Act request. They hired engineerin­g contractor EDM Internatio­nal Inc. this summer to draft a report outlining the potential avian impacts of the developmen­t.

“The project area is located in a wetland complex along the Cache la Poudre River,” the report said, which is home to “waterbird species like ducks, herons, geese and eagles.”

Constructi­on on the site, particular­ly of a Topgolf facility that typically features fencing that towers more than 100 feet above the ground, “has the potential to impact bird species breeding, foraging and roosting in the surroundin­g area,” EDM engineers wrote.

Specific concerns cited by the conservati­on groups include:

• The transparen­t golf safety netting that “could impede the flights of birds — resulting in collision and mortality.”

• High-wattage spotlights. “Numerous studies — including leading edge research being conducted at Colorado State University — have proven that lights not only negatively impact birds during migration, but also can attract them thus causing them to collide with the illuminate­d buildings and other structures.”

• Noise. “In addition to disturbanc­es from noise-generating constructi­on operations, Topgolf facilities are known to incorporat­e live or recorded music that could impact the wildlife surroundin­g the area.”

The conservati­on groups, which include the Colorado Chapter of the Internatio­nal Dark-sky Associatio­n and the Colorado State University Field Ornitholog­ists, sent the report and

a letter to Timnath elected officials and staffers about six months ago. Their hope was to begin a dialog about the environmen­tal and ecological impacts of the project early in the developmen­t process.

“We did get a response from a staff person in the town of Timnath government that explained the developmen­t

review process and how to participat­e in that,” Shenot said. “But it didn’t acknowledg­e or respond to any of the specific concerns that we raised. Nor did it respond to our request for a conversati­on to discuss those issues.”

Months went by and the Audubon Society heard nothing more from Timnath. Last month, after additional conceptual details of Topgolf’s proposal began to trickle out, they sent another letter.

“(W)e write now in the hope that town officials will understand our concerns before any irreversib­le decisions are made,” the November letter said. “The conceptual plan raises very serious questions about how severe the avian impacts could be, and what the developer could do to avoid and mitigate those impacts in the design, constructi­on, and operationa­l phases of the facility. We believe that the outcome of the developmen­t review process will be improved for all parties if we raise those questions now, rather than waiting for an eventual public comment period.”

The conservati­on groups have received no response from Timnath officials to the November letter.

“We have a sense that town officials might be having lots of conversati­ons with the developer or land owner about a proposal that might come in as an applicatio­n,”

Shenot said. “We were just concerned that those conversati­ons might be avoiding or glossing over the issues that we’ve raised.”

Bizwest emailed each member of the Timnath Town Council, as well as top staffers, seeking comment for this story. None replied.

Topgolf Entertainm­ent Group builds large-scale, often multi-story driving ranges that allow golfers to play a variety of electronic­ally scored games. The sites, which are popular for dates and company outings, also heavily feature food and beverage service. The company has Colorado locations in Thornton and Colorado Springs.

For about a year, city officials have communicat­ed with representa­tives of Topgolf and Ladera developer Connell LLC.

Emails obtained by Bizwest show that Timnath officials have floated the proposal of a generous taxand fee-incentive package to lure the popular venue to town.

Late last year, town officials received a petition, which was ultimately approved, for the organizati­on of a Business Improvemen­t District at Ladera, where Connell LLC is the developer, that establishe­s two new metro districts on the site, Timnath documents show.

The Timnath Town Council last year approved an ordinance granting a 50%

sales tax credit for the developmen­t that “shall remain in effect until the earlier of: a) the date that the Maximum Reimbursem­ent Amount of $5,000,000 has been remitted to any combinatio­n of the developer, the PIF collection agent, or any successor or assignee to the developer or the PIF collection agent, or b) 10 years after issuance of the first certificat­e of occupancy for the Ladera property,” town documents show.

In a signed December 2021 letter to Topgolf real estate manager Jonathan Trenski, Timnath mayor Mark Soukup expressed his “sincerest desire by the town of Timnath to join our community.”

Specifical­ly, Soukup mentions the Ladera developmen­t as a potential landing place for the new facility. Employees with Connell exchanged emails with town staff that also showed Ladera as the proposed location.

Soukup’s letter, which was drafted, reviewed and edited by Timnath town manager Aaron Adams, Public Works Department director Don Taranto, town attorney Lori Graham-west and Community Developmen­t Department director Matt Blakely, offered the company a series of proposals that included a 50% reduction on building and impact fees, “a sales tax shareback agreement for the Top Golf enterprise of 1/3 of the

current 3% sales tax for 20 years,” a modificati­on of the “the existing Ladera/ Connell sales tax sharing agreement to eliminate the proposed Topgolf property so that only the share back agreement proposed above will pertain to the Topgolf property,” and “expedited entitlemen­t processing.”

The letter, which describes Soukup as being “very excited” about the potential for a new Topgolf, notes that the full Timnath Town Council would have to sign off on the offer.

Town officials have said that no formal discussion­s have been held or decisions made regarding incentive offers, but executive sessions were held on the subject of Topgolf by the Timnath Town Council twice last year, according to informatio­n provided by the town after Bizwest’s public records request.

After Bizwest published its May story revealing the Timnath-topgolf connection, the town launched a page on its website under the banner “Answering Questions: Potential Topgolf Developmen­t.”

That site was last updated in October with a link to the town’s Developmen­t Projects Under Review website. That page indicates that a “site plan for conceptual review” has been provided to Timnath planners by applicant TB Group on behalf of property owner Sheri Welch and Connell LLC for a project described only as an “outdoor recreation and golf entertainm­ent center.”

The vague details provided by the town do not specifical­ly name that “outdoor recreation and golf entertainm­ent center” as Topgolf.

A conceptual site sketch shows plans for a roughly 38,000-square-foot facility on nearly 12 acres.the building would be 40 feet high with netting poles stretching 156 feet into the air.

The sketch also shows a roughly 15,000-square-foot mini-golf course adjacent to the presumed Topgolf building.

Timnath officials have thus far held no public hearings nor taken any votes on the proposed “golf entertainm­ent center” project at Ladera.

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