Hearing likely to air conflict
Public discord over expensive new developments on the east side of Lake Coeur d’Alene is expected to surface Thursday night when Kootenai County commissioners hold a hearing on a proposal to build a French-themed golf community overlooking Moscow Bay.
The Las Vegas-based Kirk-Hughes Development Company wants to build a private golf course, 475 luxury condos and homes, a day spa, a dock, and a fitness center on the former 600-acre Flying Arrow Ranch, just west of the U.S. Forest Service’s Beauty Bay Campground.
Some neighbors, including a group calling itself Citizens for Responsible Growth, are against the development and plan to oppose its approval Thursday night. They argue that Chateau de Loire, as developers have dubbed it, will put too much burden on the already dangerous state Highway 97 and will spoil the area’s bucolic character.
Many residents believe the fate of Kootenai County’s rural areas will be determined by how county officials handle the controversial development, according to Citizens for Responsible Growth, Friends of Hayden and the Kootenai Environmental Alliance.
Chateau de Loire is just one of several luxury golf communities in the works on the east side of the lake.
The county last year approved Gozzer Ranch above Arrow Point.
The proposed Powderhorn development near Harrison would add an additional 1,300 homes and a golf course.
Elsewhere, high-end developments from Black Rock to Riverside near Athol, and from Hayden Canyon to the Rathdrum Prairie, are adding thousands more homes in rural parts of the county.
“Our beautiful rural areas are being gobbled up by the uncontrolled development taking place throughout Kootenai County,” said Phil Clements of Friends of Hayden, which opposes the proposed 1,800-unit development in Hayden Canyon.
“So goes our rural areas, so goes our quality of life,” he said.
A county hearing examiner recommended approval of Chateau de Loire in March, saying there was little difference between it and Gozzer Ranch.