Court Halts Lake Tahoe Ski Resort Expansion
Flawed environmental impact report had rejected a smaller Homewood
development
Sacramento, CA—A federal judge has sent a proposed expansion of
a Lake Tahoe ski resort back to the drawing board, ruling that Placer County
and the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency (TRPA) improperly analyzed the
feasibility of building a smaller facility. The project would have transformed
the Homewood Mountain Resort in Homewood, California, into an overnight
destination resort with hundreds of new condominiums
and hotel rooms.
Led by the Tahoe Area
Sierra Club and Friends of the West Shore, local community and unified
conservation organizations had pushed for a smaller construction project.
These advocates hailed the court ruling as a vindication of their efforts to
protect the beauty and clarity of the scenic lake.
“This decision is yet
another reminder that the agencies entrusted with protecting beautiful Lake
Tahoe, which has already suffered so much from runaway development, must not
continue to allow private gain at the Lake’s expense,” said Wendy Park, an
attorney with Earthjustice, the public interest law
firm that represented the environmental groups.
In a lengthy decision
issued late Friday, U.S. District Court Judge William Shubb
rejected the developer’s claim that it would lose money if it reduced the size
of the planned resort. He noted that the combined Environmental Impact
Report and Environmental Impact Statement (EIR-EIS) inexplicably failed to
consider all streams of income, including condominium and hotel revenues.
“The EIR-EIS misleads the public by suggesting that [ski lift] ticket sales
revenue is the only relevant factor in assessing the financial viability of
Homewood…” the judge wrote. He ruled that no construction could begin until a
“legally adequate” EIR-EIS that properly considered a scaled-down project had
been prepared and circulated.
Commenting on the decision,
Ron Grassi of the Sierra Club said, “Fortunately for the public, the Judge
agreed that the developer provided an incomplete financial picture of a
smaller-sized and less harmful project, so that it was never given a fair
chance. Rather than relying simply on the developer’s paid consultant,
the County and TRPA should have done their own independent analysis. A
multi-million dollar development doesn’t have to be huge to be
successful.”
Homewood Mountain Resort is
a small, quaint, family-oriented ski facility located in a primarily
residential community on the scenic west shore of Lake Tahoe. When real
estate developer JMA Ventures proposed to build hundreds of condominiums and
hotel rooms along with a commercial center, local residents and conservation
groups challenged the plan before the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency as well as
the Placer County Board of Supervisors.
Despite concerns that the
project would exacerbate summer time traffic and air pollution in Tahoe’s peak
tourist season, TRPA approved the project in December 2011. The Agency
further weakened the existing Tahoe Regional Plan by passing special amendments
for Homewood to waive or loosen restrictions on building height, residential
density, and commercial development.
TRPA’s fundamental duty
under the bi-state Tahoe Regional Planning Compact is to restore the Lake’s
water clarity and health, which it has so far failed to accomplish. Last
December, TRPA approved a controversial new Regional Plan that delegates much
of its environmental protection duties back to local jurisdictions for
enforcement. The Plan also raises the cap on new residential and commercial
units, increases building height limits, allows more and larger paved areas,
and expands the urban boundary, significantly expanding the potential for new
development within the region.
Susan Gearhart with Friends
of West Shore said of the court ruling, “It has always been up to those
concerned citizens who care about the quality of their lives and their homes to
stand up to the wealthy and powerful interests that put profit ahead of the
health of the environment.”
Link to the decision:
http://earthjustice.org/sites/default/files/Homewood_MSJ_Order-1.pdf
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