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REGIONAL
Lake Tahoe Protections Abandoned by Tahoe Regional
Planning Agency
Author: Tahoe Area Sierra Club Group
Published on Dec 12, 2012 - 6:54:13 PM
SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif.
December 12, 2012 - Lake Tahoe took a body blow today, as the Tahoe Regional
Planning Agency handed off responsibilities for basin protections to local
governments by issuing a greatly weakened new regional plan. The new plan
allows increased development around the lake and throughout the basin,
weakens protection for the lake and surrounding land, and entrusts local
counties and the city to assert their new-found authority to care for Lake
Tahoe.
"The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency has mangled current planning
protections, turned them on their head, and abandoned the lake," said Laurel
Ames, of the Tahoe Area Sierra Club Group, noting that "there is no
evidence over the past 40 years that local agencies have the motivation,
interest or ability to protect Lake Tahoe."
Lake Tahoe is one of the largest and deepest mountain lakes in the United
States. The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency (TRPA) was created by California,
Nevada, and Congress in 1969 to protect Tahoe in response to the failure of
local jurisdictions around the lake to regulate development or take the steps
necessary to protect water clarity. After ten years of continuing local
exploitation of private property around the lake, Congress revised TRPA in
1980 to get tough and strictly regulate the basin through a new set of
standards.
TRPA's latest plan, approved today, delegates critical environmental
protections back to local jurisdictions, leaving many to wonder if a Tahoe on
development steroids will soon turn into a series of corporate resorts.
Without better protections, the scenic Tahoe loved by so many will likely morph into one with more paving and less open space, new
eight to ten story hotels, and mega-size recreation resorts built on acres of
once-pristine lands. The result will be a murkier lake and fewer views of the
mountains and the lake as local communities add three and four story
buildings along the roadways.
"This plan is based on the belief that the pathway to environmental
improvement is through economic development. There is definitely some merit
in encouraging development to replace aging commercial buildings and parking
lots. But putting all of TRPA's eggs in that basket is too risky for the golden
goose that lays those eggs”Lake Tahoe," said
Bob Anderson, Chair of the Lake Tahoe Sierra Club Group.
Wendy Park, an attorney with the public interest law firm Earthjustice,
agrees that the new plan poses new and bigger risks. "Earthjustice has represented local interests and
conservation groups in the past to protect the lake and regions around its
shoreline from unbridled construction and development. The population of
California is growing rapidly and Lake Tahoe needs stronger, not weaker,
protections to stay the very special mountain lake everyone cherishes,"
Park said.
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