Trump gets green light for golf ballroom in Doonbeg but must help protect snails

Ballroom to host 320 guests - and not harm any Vertigo angustior snails

Donald Trump's family must help protect Vertigo angustior snails in Clare
Donald Trump's family must help protect Vertigo angustior snails in Clare

Clare County Council has ‌approved a plan by the family of US president Donald Trump to build a ballroom on their golf course in Doonbeg, so long as they draw up a plan to help protect a tiny species of ​snails that live on the land.

Trump International Golf Club applied in December to build the ballroom for 320 guests, with Trump’s son Eric telling the Sunday Independent it would be “the nicest ​ball­room in the country”. Environmentalists objected, however, saying more needed to be done to improve the status of ⁠the rare Vertigo angustior snail that is protected by a European Union directive on ‌habitats ‌that ​aims to maintain or restore rare species.

Council planners granted planning permission, subject to 14 conditions, including that the golf club submit ⁠a plan for helping to conserve ​and monitor the snails before commencing any work. ​Friends of the Irish Environment had argued that no new permissions could be granted until ‌a court order related to the ​original 1999 plans for the course requiring the “maintenance or improving” of the status of the ⁠rare snail is met.

Some other ⁠local groups wrote in ​support of the planned ballroom, citing potential job opportunities at the resort, which employs 300 people during the peak summer season. Many locals credit Trump with securing their livelihoods when he bought the course in 2014.

According to the plans, the new ballroom will be 1,240sq m, a small fraction of the 8,360sq m of the ballroom planned for the White House. Trump stayed at ‌the hotel on the west coast during an official visit to Ireland in 2019.

He placed the Trump Organization in a trust managed by his children on taking office, ‌though he remains beneficiary. In 2020, Trump was refused planning permission to build a sea wall to protect ​the course from coastal erosion as planners were not satisfied the proposed development would not adversely affect the sand dune habitat at the site. – Reuters

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