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THE ROLE OF THE CALIFORNIA TAHOE CONSERVANCY
Through its land acquisition, planning, site improvement, and management
activities, the California Tahoe Conservancy plays a major role in the
basinwide effort to restore and sustain the equilibrium between the natural
and the human environment and between public and private uses at Lake Tahoe.
Conservancy Objectives
- To protect and restore the natural
environment of the basin, with priority on preserving the exceptional clarity
and quality of the waters of Lake Tahoe.
- To increase public access and
recreation opportunities for visitors to the lake.
- To preserve and enhance the broad diversity of wildlife habitat in the Tahoe Basin.
To achieve these objectives is a very complex, difficult and expensive
task, for several reasons.
It requires efforts not only to stop the degradation of the basin's natural
resources and the decrease in the clarity of the lake, but to actually reclaim
and restore the natural environment of the lake and its basin. And it
involves the introduction of new public and private uses in an already
subdivided and developed setting. This can be a complex and sensitive task,
as it is not always easy for people to envision and accept the long-term
benefits of such changes.
Urbanization of much of the basin, and the subdivision process, have
resulted in the fragmentation of the landscape into thousands of separate
parcels and ownerships. Because of this fragmentation, the Conservancy must
acquire and improve such lands parcel by parcel, as they become available,
while keeping in mind the Conservancy's goals and the complex and fragile
relationship of the parts of the ecosystem to the whole.
As these holdings increase, however, they will provide the Conservancy with
a significant resource base that will allow it to sustain their natural
functions, adapt to ecosystem changes, and incorporate new and beneficial
improvements over time.
Time itself is an important factor. There is an urgent need to deal with
resources which are fast deteriorating. This is difficult because it also
takes time to develop and implement projects that can effectively counteract
that deterioration. It takes time to design site improvement projects so they
will meet the basin's stringent regulatory requirements. It takes time for
the necessary coordination with the many other concerned agencies and
organizations. Extra time may even be needed to complete construction,
because of the short building season in the Tahoe Basin.
Conservancy Programs
To achieve its objectives, the Conservancy is implementing seven major programs:
- To preserve environmentally sensitive
lands through acquisition
- To repair already disturbed areas
through soil erosion control grants
- To restore degraded wetlands and
watershed areas
- To mitigate land-coverage impacts on
water quality and permit the transfer of development rights from more
environmentally sensitive areas to ones that are less sensitive
- To enhance public access and
recreation opportunities
- To protect, preserve, and enhance
wildlife populations and the diversity of habitats that sustain them
- To manage the lands it acquires so
they can most effectively serve the purposes for which they were acquired
To implement these programs as rapidly as possible, the Conservancy uses
two basic approaches simultaneously -- (1) direct activities by the
Conservancy, which acquires and improves lands under all of its programs and
(2) grants to other public agencies and organizations.
Direct Activities
Acquisitions
Because Conservancy acquisitions are on a "willing-seller" basis,
the Conservancy must be responsive to landowner needs in a variety of ways.
Thus, it acquires a wide variety of interests, including not only full fee
title but also lesser interests such as conservation and public access
easements or development rights.
The Conservancy also uses a variety of land acquisition techniques,
including direct purchase, options, land exchanges, the acquisition of
tax-delinquent properties, "bulk" acquisitions, "bargain"
sales, donations, dedications, and assistance from non-profit intermediaries.
It may also acquire land in a variety of special situations, such as helping
to resolve a planning problem or assisting in the settlement of litigation.
Increasingly, the Conservancy is seeking to utilize its lands to form the
foundation of larger projects involving public and private lands to get the
greatest benefit from the Conservancy's acquisition, management, and
restoration activities.
Planning
Conservancy projects must not only be in accord with a programs' objectives
and regional planning objectives, they should also be sensitive on the local
level to the concerns of residents and visitors and the needs of the basin's communities.
To assure this, the Conservancy has developed a comprehensive planning
process for its major projects that engages representatives from a broad range
of interests -- community environmental, business, and governmental.
This process helps to inform the public and other public agencies of the
Conservancy's objectives, and also to inform the Conservancy of ways to
improve the project.
The Conservancy is also utilizing planning activities to help resolve or
mediate land-use disputes.
Restoring the Land
The Conservancy also restores and improves acquired properties so they can
best serve the purposes for which they were acquired. With the assistance of
public and private contractors, the Conservancy has undertaken a number of
site restoration projects involving revegetation and erosion control
activities and improvements for wildlife and public access and recreation.
Many more are planned.
Grants Program
The Conservancy's ability to award grants greatly increases its
effectiveness. Grants enable it to facilitate the ongoing commitment and
capabilities of other public agencies and nonprofit organizations which have
similar objectives. These agencies and organizations also may be the most
appropriate manager of projects because they often own the affected property
or public rights-of-way and have available staff and management capabilities.
Summary of Activities
Since 1985, the Conservancy has authorized the expenditure, directly or
through grants, of more than $150 million to acquire or obtain various kinds
of interests in more than 5,450 parcels involving more than 6,450 acres of
land, and for the implementation of 325 erosion control, public access,
wildlife enhancement, and restoration and management projects.
Support of Basinwide Goals
While striving to meet its own goals, the Conservancy also assists the
various levels of government at Lake Tahoe in achieving their land use and
resource management objectives by helping to fund their programs and projects.
The Conservancy encourages and facilitates basinwide efforts to acquire
environmentally sensitive lands, control erosion, restore watersheds, provide
public access and recreation facilities, and preserve wildlife habitat.
Facilitating The Planning Process
The Conservancy's programs help the basinwide planning process by allowing
the consideration of public uses and the incorporation of needed erosion
control and access elements in projects being planned by other agencies.
(Agencies such as utility districts are often restricted to using their own
funds for specific purposes only.) To help support local efforts which also
meet state and regional objectives, the Conservancy has provided more than 100
grants to local governments.
Helping to Meet Regulatory Requirements
The Conservancy is also helping private and public sponsors to meet
mitigation requirements through its land coverage and other programs. The
Conservancy's land coverage program has facilitated more than 2,400 private
and public projects by helping proponents meet their coverage or other obligations.
Equitable Alternative
It is also helping to provide an equitable alternative to owners of
environmentally sensitive lands, within the context of overall resource
management efforts in the basin.
Resolving Land Use Conflicts
The Conservancy has helped resolve land-use conflicts by agreeing to
acquire the disputed lands when they have significant resource values. This
has already proven especially helpful in a number of cases that had been
subject to years of litigation. Through this process, is has, in cooperation
with the Office of the Attorney General, acquired more than 624 acres of some
of the most significant resource lands in the basin, including the mouth of
the Upper Truckee River, Eagle Rock, and Moon Dunes.
Private/Public Partnerships
During the past five years, there has been an important emphasis on
private/public partnerships which recognizes the interdependence of
environmental protection and sustainable economic activity.
This has led to collaborative and cooperative efforts to share information
through organizations such as the Tahoe Coalition of Recreation Providers
(TCORP), to join in the development of projects involving both public and
private lands, and to form partnerships to seek both private and public
funding of programs.
In this regard, the Conservancy has sought to support efforts such as
forums on sustainable development, wildlife issues, public access to
environmental data, and the development of a uniform signage program. It has
also sought to increase the role of the private sector in the management of
Conservancy lands.
Economic Benefits
The Conservancy's programs also provide economic benefits to the region by
supporting development and local community efforts to achieve economic,
environmental, and public access objectives. The Conservancy has provided
more than $5 million for redevelopment projects in the City of South Lake
Tahoe, for example, and funded projects in eleven community plan areas.
The resulting increase in property values also benefits local governments
by increasing their property tax base.
Conservancy projects also create employment. Over 80% of the work on a
project is done by the private sector, with about 60 people involved in design
and construction on a typical site improvement projects.
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