Kohler scores a major victory in Wisconsin court; plans for Whistling Straits’ sister course can move forward

It’s the latest step in a years-long legal obstacle course Kohler has been negotiating.

Wisconsin’s Supreme Court has ruled that a conservation group has no legal standing to challenge a DNR land swap that would allow Kohler Co. to develop another golf course along Lake Michigan.

It’s the latest step in a years-long legal obstacle course Kohler has been negotiating as it tries to add another championship-level course in the Sheboygan area. It already owns Blackwolf Run and Whistling Straits, which have hosted multiple major championships, and houses four top courses — Whistling Straits Straits Course, Whistling Straits Irish, Blackwolf Run Meadow Valley and Blackwolf Run River.

In 2020, the Supreme Court sided with Kohler on another dispute related to the golf course project, upholding annexation of the site by the city of Sheboygan to avoid a possible denial of a special use permit from the Town of Wilson.

Additionally, Kohler is appealing a judge’s decision last year upholding an administrative judge’s decision that the DNR improperly issued Kohler Co. a permit to fill wetlands. That case is currently before the Court of Appeals.

Thursday’s 4-3 decision reversed a decision by the Court of Appeals, which had ruled the Friends of the Black River Forest could advance its challenge of the land swap. The Friends say the loss of parkland would harm the group’s recreational, conservation and aesthetic interests.

Those interests aren’t clearly protected in laws, the court decided.

“None of the statutes or regulations cited protect any legally protected, recognized, or regulated interests of the Friends that would permit them to challenge the Board’s decision as “person[s] aggrieved,” Justice Rebecca Bradley wrote for the majority.

Justices Patience Roggensack, Annette Ziegler and Brian Hagedorn joined the opinion.

In dissent, Justice Jill Karofsky blasted the majority’s “textualism” approach as a “rhetorical smokescreen obscuring a result-oriented analysis.” Justices Rebecca Dallet and Ann Walsh Bradley joined the dissent.

The Friends of the Black River Forest, Inc., issued a statement saying it was “disappointed in today’s Wisconsin Supreme Court decision reversing the Wisconsin Court of Appeals, which had declared unequivocally that active users of Wisconsin state parks may lawfully challenge the State when it gives away those park lands to private interests.

Ryder Cup Practice Rounds
Rory McIlroy hits his tee shot on the 3rd hole during practice rounds for the 43rd Ryder Cup golf competition at Whistling Straits. (Photo: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports)

“Today’s decision sets a disturbing new precedent for Wisconsinites and their ability to fight arbitrary and oppressive agency actions that affect their daily lives—actions that may extend far beyond where and whether they enjoy Wisconsin’s natural resources.”

The group said it will continue its mission “to protect Wisconsin parks for the good of Wisconsin’s citizens, not its companies.”

Dirk Willis, Vice President – Golf, Landscape & Retail for Kohler Co. Hospitality, said the company was pleased with the decision.

“We look forward to developing our public golf course in the City of Sheboygan on property owned by Kohler Co. for more than 75 years, and are committed to creating a world-class golf course that respects the property’s natural character and opens up private land to the public for the first time.” Willis said.

Willis said Kohler has “an established track record of good environmental stewardship with a commitment to following all applicable municipal, state and federal regulations.”

In 2018, the state Natural Resources Board agreed to give Kohler 4.6 acres of Kohler-Andrae State Park, on Lake Michigan, in exchange for about 10 acres of land west of the park. The state would also grant Kohler an easement over an additional 1.8 acres of the park.

The park property that would go to Kohler includes thick woods, open sand dunes and wetlands. The state would get upland woodland, cropland, a home and outbuildings.

Friends of Black River Forest challenged the deal. Kohler and the DNR argued the group had no legal standing, and that the swap was not even a “decision” subject to judicial review.

A Sheboygan County judge dismissed the action for lack of standing, but the Court of Appeals reinstated the challenge.

The appeals court found that the plaintiffs had in fact alleged sufficient injuries to be heard, not just dismissed. It is “not hypothetical or conjectural that the land exchange may cause the Friends to suffer the alleged recreational, aesthetic, and conservational injuries as a result of the golf course construction,” the court wrote.

The Supreme Court, however, said none of the Friends’ injuries — like loss of use of the swapped portion of the park, negative impacts on wildlife and plants, and increased noise and traffic from the eventual golf course, were protected by a statutory or constitutional provision.

Karofsky wrote that it was the majority that ignores the plain meaning of the law, “by distorting case law, conflating standing with the merits, and failing to engage in any meaningful interpretation of the legislative text.”

“Members of the public need not sit idly by when a state agency may have transgressed the very laws designed to protect their interests,” Karofsky wrote.

“Rather, the legislature has guaranteed that any person ‘whose substantial interests are adversely affected’ by an agency decision may call upon the judiciary to be a check on executive decision-making.”

Contact Bruce Vielmetti at (414) 224-2187 or bvielmetti@jrn.com. Follow him on Twitter at @ProofHearsay.

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Keisers’ Sand Valley adding a fourth golf course, 6-acre putting course

While Sedge Valley won’t open for another two years, other new amenities at Sand Valley are set to arrive next year.

New plans at Sand Valley will add a smokehouse, putting course, practice facility, arcade, tennis center, bistro restaurant, pool house and opportunities to own homes on-site.

Last week, Sand Valley announced it would begin construction this month on a multi-facility expansion. A new 18-hole course called Sedge Valley will open in 2024, part of Sedge Village. The village will feature a new smokehouse restaurant that includes a barbecue pit and craft beer, as well as a 6-acre putting course, an interactive golf entertainment center with all-season golf simulators and a game arcade, also opening in 2024.

While Sedge Valley won’t open for another two years, other new amenities at Sand Valley are set to arrive next year.

A Sand Valley Pool House will open in 2023, featuring an infinity pool, sauna, steam and cold plunges. The Pool House will also offer massage techniques in eight treatment rooms, as well as a grab-and-go station for food and drinks.

Sand Valley will also grow its focus on tennis. A 13,000-square-foot Tennis Center will open in 2023, adjacent to its 15 grass tennis courts. The center will feature outdoor seating overlooking the courts and Sedge Valley’s 18th hole. The Tennis Center will include a bistro-style restaurant with a brick wood-fired oven and a pro shop.

Sedge Village will also feature a collection of 36 homes, most of which will overlook a 17-acre lake. Sedge Village Estate sites will range from 4 to 30 acres, and buyers can work with their own architects to design seasonal or year-round homes.

Sedge Village Cottage homesites are smaller at one-half to 2 acres, and the first cottages will open for the 2023 season.

Michael Keiser, who owns Sand Valley with his brother, Chris Keiser, said they always want to give their guests new reasons to return.

“We have always said to our guests, ‘if you keep coming back, we’ll keep giving you more reasons to return,’” Michael Keiser said. “Sedge Village gives us all something to look forward to.”

For more information, visit sandvalley.com/sedge-valley.

Contact Caitlin at cshuda@gannett.com or follow her on Twitter @CaitlinShuda.

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Is Kohler’s new ‘championship’ course near Whistling Straits being groomed for majors? It’s doubtful.

Designed by late Straits architect Pete Dye, Kohler intends this to be one of the world’s best.

SHEBOYGAN, Wisconsin — Following the Ryder Cup, Whistling Straits owner Kohler Co. has no other major tournaments scheduled at its Sheboygan County golf courses — and a new Kohler course proposed in Sheboygan likely won’t host such events, the company told The Sheboygan Press.

Like Whistling Straits, where the U.S. trounced Europe last week in what Herbert V. Kohler Jr. has described as “the granddaddy of all golf tournaments,” Kohler’s proposed new course is on the Lake Michigan shoreline and was designed by late Straits architect Pete Dye to be one of the world’s best — often described by Kohler as a “championship” course.

But while Whistling Straits was built with the intention of courting major tournaments, the new course would not be, the company said.

“It is our expectation there will not be any large-scale major golf tournaments on the site,” said Dirk Willis, vice president of golf, landscape and retail for Kohler Hospitality, in a statement.

Local officials who spoke to The Sheboygan Press say that, from the beginning, Kohler representatives said the company had no plans to host major championships at the proposed course. But people from elected officials to concerned residents questioned whether that meant Kohler had ruled them out, and Dye himself had speculated that it might host majors.

Whistling Straits has hosted three PGA Championships and a U.S. Senior Open in addition to last week’s Ryder Cup, and Blackwolf Run, Kohler’s nearby golf course complex, has hosted two U.S. Women’s Opens.

The proposed new course, after years of legal challenges, is still not approved. Willis first said in a statement to the Press last week that, if it gets approval, there “will not be any major tournaments on the site” of the new course, later clarifying that the new course has an intimate design that isn’t as well suited for major tournaments as Kohler’s other courses.

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Kohler’s hopes for majors have been unclear in official documents

The chair of the Town of Wilson board, John Ehmann, said that whether the course would host major championships was “a question (the board) asked more than once” when Kohler was first applying for a conditional use permit, before the city of Sheboygan annexed the land from the town.

“Their standard reply was, they had no plans to hold major tournaments. It was obviously in their best interest to reply that way, because then they did not have to address traffic and congestion concerns that the town would have had as a part of the permitting process,” Ehmann said.

But other statements portrayed the course as angling for a U.S. Open and other top events.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported in 2015 that Dye (who died in January 2020) said the course could host major championships. And after an interview with Herbert V. Kohler Jr., executive chairman of Kohler, Wisconsin Golf reported in 2019 that the course could be pitched to the United States Golf Association as a tournament venue in the future.

The Department of Natural Resources’ updated draft environmental impact statement for the course in November 2017 said it was unknown what special events would be held at the course, but it was anticipated that the course “may” host tournaments including the PGA Championship, U.S. Senior Open, the Ryder Cup and the U.S. Women’s Open.

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The final EIS in 2018 said, “Kohler has stated that it hopes that the course will be a site for future major professional golf championship events.”

In response, local officials and residents opposed to the course have worried it would be too small for the crowds and traffic that Kohler’s other courses have accommodated. People also raised concerns about the potential environmental impacts of major tournaments.

An extensive permitting process and a half-dozen court challenges have meant Kohler has had many chances to officially describe its ambitions for the course, but it has made little mention of major tournaments, instead describing the course as a “championship” course that Kohler hopes to make into one of the world’s top 50.

A “championship” course is a subjective label with no agreed-upon meaning in the golf world. Company representatives said that a golf course can be world-ranked and championship-level without hosting a major championship. It’s ultimately up to golf associations such as the USGA and PGA of America to decide which courses host major championships, the company said.

“Many public and private top-ranked golf courses have not hosted major tournaments, and that does not diminish their quality and rankings among golf enthusiasts,” Willis said in a statement.

Course still faces environmental objections, legal hurdles

Herbert Kohler Jr., 82, made it his mission to bring championship golf to Wisconsin. And one of his signature courses — Whistling Straits — hosted the 43rd Ryder Cup.

The proposed course is currently mired in ongoing lawsuits after surviving other challenges — some of them similar to those faced by Whistling Straits, and others unique to the new course.

In 1995, DNR officials were reluctant to approve wetland permits for the construction of Whistling Straits. The project’s DNR water regulation specialist declined to sign the permit, and her boss signed the permit but told reporters it was a “tough decision” ultimately swayed by Kohler’s economic arguments, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported in 1996.

Similarly, environmental advocates challenged the wetland permit for the proposed new course

Kohler applied to fill 3.7 acres of wetlands between the Black River and Lake Michigan for the proposed course in 2017. Six months later, the DNR approved the permit, but then Friends of the Black River Forest — a local nonprofit with the mission to preserve the Black River area — challenged the decision.

Two former DNR employees have said the wetland permit did not meet state standards and, according to court documents, the DNR received over 1,400 total pages of public comments on the issue. In 2019, an administrative law judge overturned the wetland permit. Kohler has sued, seeking to reinstate the permit, a case still open in the Wisconsin Court of Appeals.

Other lawsuits and processes that have delayed construction of the proposed course include:

  • Storm water permit. The Friends challenged the DNR’s approval of a storm water permit, a case now moving forward in Sheboygan County circuit courts.
  • Land swap. Kohler’s proposal included the use 4.6 acres of state-owned land in Kohler-Andrae State Park and an easement over another nearly 2 acres, and the Friends challenged the legality of DNR’s plan to approve a land swap with the company, a case now in the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
  • Historic resources report. Before the golf course can be constructed, the state historical society must approve a report on limiting damage to historic resources on the property. Researchers are still cataloging around 38,000 historic and 214,000 prehistoric artifacts found on the property from Native Americans who lived in the region between 800 to 2,500 years ago, as reported by Wisconsin Watch.
  • Conditional use permit. The land eyed for the new golf course was originally in the Town of Wilson, but Sheboygan successfully annexed the land and approved the golf course in 2020 — after a lawsuit from the Town of Wilson that went to the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
  • The course layout is not suited to major tournaments, Kohler says
    The 43rd Ryder Cup brought tens of thousands of golf fans each day to Whistling Straits, which owner Kohler Co. says was designed and built to accommodate such events, unlike a new course proposed in Sheboygan.

When asked why the proposed course will not host majors, Kohler Co. said that major tournaments require a lot of resources and amenities beyond a quality golf course experience.

Tournaments require temporary infrastructure including grandstands, hospitality stands, a merchandise shop, food vendors and parking.

“Our proposed golf course is intimate and cloaked with trees, whereas our other courses were built to host large-scale major golf tournaments,” Willis said.

As of March 2017, the layout of Kohler’s proposed golf course, which was designed by late course architect Pete Dye with the ambition of making it one of the world’s best.

Former Sheboygan mayor Mike Vandersteen similarly said that the proposed course’s limited space for traffic and crowds is one reason it was never his impression that there would be major tournament events there.

“It was going to be a minimalist course, which means that if you weren’t on the green, you were many times on some really rough stuff,” Vandersteen said.

Willis also said that professional golfers today hit the ball much farther than in the past, which lengthy courses like Whistling Straits and Blackwolf Run can better accommodate.

Whistling Straits, a 560-acre property, has two 18-hole golf courses and other amenities including a 13,000-square-foot clubhouse. It played nearly 7,400 yards for the Ryder Cup last week.

The new proposed course, with only one 18-hole course, would sit on slightly less than half of that space, nearly 250 acres, but also include an up-to-16,000-square foot clubhouse with a 9,000-square-foot footprint, a 22,000-square-foot maintenance building, an observation tower, an irrigation pond, golf cart paths and roads.

As of Wednesday afternoon, a Kohler spokesperson hadn’t responded to a question about the new course’s yardage.

Reach Maya Hilty at 920-400-7485 or MHilty@sheboygan.gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter at @maya_hilty.

The perfect internship? Play 50 rounds of golf this summer — and get paid.

This state is seeking an applicant willing to play at 50 spots across the state for $10 an hour plus expenses for lodging, travel and golf.

What percentage of Wisconsinites have looked out their window this week and thought about golfing? Maybe 50%? Higher?

Now imagine golfing for the entire summer, and getting paid for it.

The Wisconsin State Golf Association has cultivated what might constitute the best internship … ever? … seeking out an applicant willing to play a round of golf at 50 spots across the state for $10 an hour plus expenses for lodging, travel and golf. The WSGA is calling it “America’s No. 1 golf internship.”

“We really wanted to do something fun and unique while Wisconsin will already have a lot of attention on it with Ryder Cup being here,” said Rob Jansen, executive director of the WSGA. “The internship would promote all the great courses we have in Wisconsin. We have highly ranked ones but a lot of people don’t know we have 10 of the top 100 courses in the national rankings right here in Wisconsin.”

Jansen wants someone who’s ready to play them all.

The job would involve 50 rounds in 10 weeks, with ample photography and social-media documentation to highlight the various spots across the state.

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“You don’t have to be the best golfer in the world; we’re looking for other skills that an individual might have,” Jansen said. “You still need a passion for golf, but what you shoot is secondary to how you experience the courses. We’ll look for photography skills, social-media skills, talking about the journey and highlighting what’s great about Wisconsin golf.”

Jansen said the visuals produced would serve as a photographic journal and give some courses promotional materials to use later. He’s looking for all applications by April 1. Applicants don’t necessarily need to be from Wisconsin; he’s already received submissions from across the country.

Applications need to be submitted via social media, either quote-tweeting the WSGA’s call for applicants, or by finding a creative means to share interest on Facebook or Instagram stories using #hiremeWSGA or #1golfinternship hashtags.

Jansen hopes to announce the intern on May 1, and golf begins June 1. In its inaugural year, the job could feature rounds with local dignitaries or perhaps even sports figures around the state.

JR Radcliffe can be reached at (262) 361-9141 or jradcliffe@gannett.com. Follow him on Twitter at @JRRadcliffe.

The best golf courses you can play in Wisconsin: Golfweek’s Best

PGA backs Whistling Straits sister project in Wisconsin; vote on permit could take place Tuesday

Kohler already runs Blackwolf Run® and Whistling Straits, two immensely popular golf destinations.

The city of Kohler, Wisconsin, could vote Tuesday afternoon on a conditional use permit for Kohler to build its new golf course at the Kohler-Andrae State Park.

If approved by the city’s Planning Commission today, the conditional use permit would allow Kohler Company to construct a new golf course on Kohler Company property north of Kohler-Andrae State Park between Black River and Lake Michigan. Kohler already runs Blackwolf Run® and Whistling Straits, two immensely popular golf destinations that makeup four of the top 10 golf courses in Wisconsin you can play, according to Golfweek.

Upward of 20 public comments are expected to be given at the meeting. The majority of them are expected to be in opposition, but some like the Professional Golfers Association submitted letters in support of Kohler.

Wisconsin PGA/WPGA Junior Foundation Executive Director Joe Stadler said he won’t be able to attend the meeting, but called Kohler a “great asset” to Wisconsin’s golf community.

Whistling Straits
Whistling Straits (Straits Course), Kohler, Wisconsin. The Kohler Company is applying for a permit to build a nearby lakefront golf course in what is currently a state park. Photo by Kohler/Whistling Straits

In a nine-page letter, environmental engineer Roger Miller is asking the Plan Commission not to approve the permit. His letter claims the permit is incomplete, and that environmental impacts haven’t been evaluated properly, including changes in lake levels.

Miller suggests further assessments be done to determine how much environmental impact there would be from proposed actions like filling wetlands and cutting down woodlands to create the course.

A letter attached to the permit application said aspects of the project have been challenged in six different lawsuits. It goes on to say Kohler is committed to “resolving the lawsuits and developing the course.”

The letter says Kohler is asking for a conditional use permit now to avoid any further time delays so construction can begin once all the lawsuits are resolved.

At Tuesday’s meeting, the plan commission can approve the permit with various conditions, hold the permit or deny it. An OK from the commission is the final approval for the conditional use permits. No additional approval from the Common Council is needed.

The Friends of the Black River Forest have been in a legal battle with Kohler and the state over the development of the course for over two-and-a-half years.

The Friends were elated in September when the Court of Appeals reinstated their challenge to a land swap agreement with the Department of Natural Resources. In the agreement, Kohler would get just shy of 6.5 acres of parkland in exchange for 10 acres just west of the park.

Originally, the Friends challenged the land swap saying it violates rules against selling or disposing of state park property. Kohler said the Friends didn’t have sufficient standing to challenge.

The September decision reinstated the Friends’ cases against the land swap.

In February, Kohler had a big win when the Wisconsin Supreme Court unanimously ruled that the city of Sheboygan could annex 250 acres in the town of Wilson that includes the site where Kohler hopes the course will sit.

Reach AnnMarie Hilton at ahilton@gannett.com or (920) 242-3032. Follow her on Twitter at @hilton_annmarie.

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