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Dressed as trees, demonstrators protest golf course restoration in Rock Creek Park

The National Capital Planning Commission holds hearings on a plan that includes cutting and replanting more than 1,000 trees.

WASHINGTON — Demonstrators dressed as forest creatures and trees protested a National Park Service plan to restore the historic Rock Creek Park Golf Course on Tuesday.

“Rock Creek Park is an ecosystem where each species sustains the other," said one protestor dressed in an elaborate tree costume.

The golf course restoration plan includes the cutting and replanting of at least 1,000 trees in an effort to restore the dilapidated course near the intersection of 16th Street Northwest and Military Road Northwest.

The Sierra Club is among the groups shocked by the scale of the tree cutting plan, which includes the destruction of hundreds of mature, healthy, native trees, in addition to large numbers of invasive and diseased trees.

A restoration plan includes the replanting of as many as 2,100 trees on 7.1 acres.

But opponents point out that the planned tree cutting will disrupt wildlife and the restored trees will not grow to maturity for decades, resulting in a dramatically changed environment in the early years after the project.

The course has suffered from decades of neglect and deferred maintenance, according to Michael Stachowicz, a project manager for the National Park Service, which has been working on a restoration solution since 2016.

Stachowicz says the plan will reduce the overall area of park dedicated to golf, replant more trees than will be cut, and create 12.7 acres of ecological meadow habitat which currently does not exist.

“We think that this is the best balance," Stachowicz said. "We have to take care of the historic resource and we have to take care of the natural resource."

Stachowicz added that the parks founding documents designate the park as a recreational as well as a natural resource. Golf on the site dates back to 1909.

The current course was built in 1927 and is on the National Register of Historic Places.

"These golf courses are a community hub, and it is important. They're affordable. They have a great history to them," Stachowicz said.

The National Park Service is seeking approval from the National Capital Planning Commission, which will hold a public hearing on the issue Thursday.

The National Park Service has selected the nonprofit National Links Trust as a concessionaire to redevelop and operate the course for the next 50 years.

"National Links Trust is a nonprofit organization dedicated to positively impacting our community and changing lives through affordable and accessible municipal golf," the NLT's website says.

"Our vision is to be known as the leading advocate and resource for municipal golf across the United States."

The NLT's first projects are the restoration of D.C.'s historic municipal golf courses at East Potomac, Langston and Rock Creek Park, said Mike McCartin, co-founder of NLT.

"We're going to plant more acreage of trees than we're going to remove. So in the long term, as we think about the next 50 years of our lease, were actually going to end up with more tree canopy," McCartin said.

NLT documents say there will be a significant reduction in soil erosion and sediment run-off into Rock Creek through rain gardens, healthy turf coverage, meadow grasses, and other stormwater management techniques, after the redevelopment.

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