I am still trying to figure out why on earth a golf cart path is necessary in the first place (I guess I really just don't understand why golf carts are necessary in a non- golf community). And the bigger question- why is a recommendation from a 1995 study being considered over infrastructure improvements that are years behind - like the improvements and regular maintenance of the multi- use paths.
Is the family who demands that a golf cart be part of their vacation experience really the demographic we want here?
Like I said above, this is low hanging fruit for a construction company to generate some revenue. The Genesis plan was adopted, therefore, the path is felt to be needed. Money apparently exists to fund the construction (I'm not 100% sure about this but maybe a competitive grant and not truly county money, but I am not sure about this). To my knowledge nobody (local or tourist) is requesting the path be built as a quality of life project or something that will enhance the area. It is a little money grab by the construction company. The topic of using money to improve the Western Lake path (where someone is going to get killed without widening) came up and it was stated the cost would far exceed that needed to pave a little flat asphault path over empty land.
My take was that there was not a whole lot that could be done to stop the path if money is secured to build it. Unless the public flooded the organization that distributed the grant with letters and calls begging the money not be released for the purpose.