Governor Ruth Ann Minner, Senator Nancy Cook, Kent County Levy Court Commissioner Brooks Banta and other officials and community leaders joined together on September 10 to dedicate the refurbished Garrisons Lake Golf Course south of Smyrna.
The ceremony marked the culmination of efforts to restore the golf course and prevent it from becoming a housing development.
Four years ago, plans were in place to turn the 160-acre golf course into a housing subdivision, but the state intervened and purchased the land for $3.4 million. The state decided to preserve and renovate the existing golf course and partnered with the Delaware State Golf Association (DSGA) to operate it as a public course.
Now the renovations are complete and Garrisons Lake is back. The course reopened to the public for golf on September 12.
“As a result of this project, residents will enjoy a quality of life they enjoyed before and can continue to enjoy,” said Governor Minner at the event. “Garrisons Lake is an example of what can be accomplished when you have a dedicated group of people. The neighbors banded together and stood strong.”
As she spoke to the audience while standing at the new clubhouse facility, Gov. Minner said “it’s better to be looking at these beautiful green tees than more houses crowding out the houses that are already here.”
Governor Minner commended everyone who had a hand in the restoration of the course.
“It’s a beautiful place and it has many benefits for Delaware,” she said.
Senator Nancy Cook said she supported the preservation of the golf course largely because of the need for open space, especially in light of all the development in the areas surrounding Garrisons Lake.
“For me, it wasn’t the golf course, it was the open space,” she said. “I think, many years from now, we’ll look back and say ‘thank heavens we’ve still got this.’”
Senator Cook also said the preservation of the course wouldn’t have been possible if developer Jay Sonecha of Blenheim Homes hadn’t agreed to sell the land to the state.
Gary Dodge, representing the Citizens Alliance for Responsible Expansion (CARE), echoed that sentiment. He said Sonecha had to make a hard decision to walk away from the development plans.
“Absent that, we wouldn’t be standing here today,” Dodge said.
After the dedication ceremony, Dodge said that the number of people who joined the fight to save Garrisons Lake showed how important it was for residents.