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July 4 can mean freedom to litter Lake Tahoe beaches


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By Stephen Ward

Pristine might have been the last word to use to describe the beaches of Lake Tahoe early this morning.

Thanks to a group of volunteers on the South Shore, most people will never know what the shoreline looked like after people left behind their trash from the Fourth’s festivities.

With the South Shore’s population more than doubling for the holiday weekend, the impact on the environment is noticeable, as is people’s reluctance to be responsible for themselves. Instead of using trash receptacles, they left their trash and other items on the beach.

A trash collected from South Tahoe beaches on a previous July 5. Photo/Kenny Curtzwiler

Trash collected from South Tahoe beaches on a previous July 5. Photo/Kenny Curtzwiler

This is the 11th year Kenny Curtzwiler, owner of K&K Services, has rallied his staff together to clean the majority of El Dorado Beach, along with Regan Beach and the walkways surrounding Highway 50.

“One day I walked over to El Dorado Beach and noticed it was wrecked, and I decided to start cleaning up,” Meyers resident Curtzwiler said. “I never asked the city for help, I just decided to clean it myself.”

South Lake Tahoe Parks and Recreation Director Gary Moore sang the praises of Curtzwiler, saying the cleanup takes a lot of pressure off his department. Until last year, Curtzwiler had paid the dumping fees.

Curtzwiler and his five employees are sticking to the same regime they have for the past decade, which involves coming to the area with a dump truck and trailer to load all the waste into the beds of the vehicles before taking the collection to South Tahoe Refuse. Curtzwiler estimates approximately 50 yards of trash are accumulated each year.

He is starting the work this morning at 6 on the lake side of Highway 50 across from Aloha Ice Cream, they work their way east and anticipate being done by 10:30am. Curtzwiler says volunteers are welcome.

According to Curtzwiler, the majority of trash found at the sites is broken chairs, empty beer bottles and wet clothes.

Clean Tahoe crews will also be out today. The nonprofit that picks up trash in the public right-of-way in the El Dorado County portion of the basin was preparing to spend the majority of today restoring the facilities tarnished by tourists.

“We have two trucks we use to pick up trash from the public walking areas,” said Ellen Nunes, who runs Clean Tahoe.

Clean Tahoe has set its focus on cleaning the public parameters, and believes a few hours will be needed in order to fully regenerate the grounds.

The U.S. Forest Service owns Nevada, Kiva, Pope and Baldwin beaches on the South Shore. Because phone calls were not returned, it’s not known what their plan of action is for the debris left behind form Fourth of July revelers.

While many organizations anticipate a substantial amount of garbage left behind, some resorts don’t consider cleaning up after the holiday a grueling endeavor.

Austin Sass, spokesman at Zephyr Cove Resort, anticipates the Zephyr Cove beach to be back to normal within two to three hours, and says the time it takes to restore the property isn’t different than any other weekend.

“We get our entire staff out there and pick up trash until the beach is clean again,” Sass said.

As for harmful materials, Sass is steadfast in ensuring the property will not be threatened by the use of fireworks or glass beverages.

“We have recycle bins at the front of all entrances to the beach,” Sass said. “And you can’t even see the fireworks from our beach since we’re a cove, so we close before the show even gets started.”

Though jurisdictions have fines for littering, with resources on the Fourth devoted elsewhere, it is impossible to enforce such laws.

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Comments

Comments (14)
  1. tahoeadvocate says - Posted: July 5, 2010

    How come the authorities haven’t stopped K&K Services from this cleanup like they were doing to the volunteers in the Gulf Oil spill? Seems like Tahoe apprciates this help while the Federal Government trys to find impediments to demonstrate they’re in charge.

  2. Carl Ribaudo says - Posted: July 5, 2010

    Nice job K&K!

  3. H says - Posted: July 5, 2010

    Thanks Kenny..

    Was coming back from the valley,it’s one big traffic jam down to hang-town.

    Now the local boaters can get back to quite trolling,having a beer on the beach.

  4. Shirley says - Posted: July 5, 2010

    How sad the public abuse public lands without a thought. Most would not do that on their own property but then again, maybe they would.

    Welcome to our world.

    Many thanks to all the volunteers who take the time to clean up the mess.
    (each year)

  5. Skibum says - Posted: July 5, 2010

    Well we got another year in and I need to thank a few people. First off my crew for showing up, they get paid for the day but they don’t have to show up. The City guys, Max, Ishmail, Travis, Dennis and Curtis. This is the most people the City has sent!! Thank You Gary! Our one early volunteer Dan Schebri Thanks Buddy and our Yoga man Chuck who helped with Reagan Beach. Alpinia Coffee at theY down 89 donated the coffee. Thanks to all.

  6. dogwoman says - Posted: July 5, 2010

    Thanks to YOU, Skibum. I was already working at 6 am today, but I was sending you guys good thoughts! Did you take any pictures? I never get down there on holiday weekends (!) and am curious how bad it was.

  7. Skibum says - Posted: July 5, 2010

    Got photos of the Beach which is the worse I have seen in the eleven years we have done this and it was mostly locals as I found several drivers license’s. Lots of glass on the beach.

  8. Ernie Claudio says - Posted: July 6, 2010

    Thanks Kenny!

    Thanks for the previous ten years too.

  9. Dennis Cocking says - Posted: July 6, 2010

    Thanks Ken. Good job.

    It is unfortunate you have to spend your July 5’s cleaning up other peoples trash, but my hat is off to you.

  10. Skibum says - Posted: July 6, 2010

    I have never seen you wear a hat Dennis lol. Thanks but I don’t have to I just do. Thank You all for your kind words though.

  11. Peter Hussmann says - Posted: July 6, 2010

    Thanks for all you do for our town. I have been cleaning up trash along the banks of the Upper Truckee River left by the record number of people floating the river this year.The sad part is you can’t blame all of it on tourists as the majority are locals. Just don’t understand why people have to toss their empty beer cans in to the bushes, the empties don’t take up that much room in their rafts.

  12. Skibum says - Posted: July 6, 2010

    Most of the trash that’s on the beach is left by locals as evident of drivers license I have found wrapped around an empty cig box and left with the pile on the beach. Go out to Camp Rich any day and see the locals, mostly young newbies, leave butts and trash on the beach. All the trash is left by locals the rest of the year. Also locals cause more accidents than they are in because “I live here”. Always the newbies

  13. Cool Breeze says - Posted: July 6, 2010

    Skibum,

    Thanks for the work you and your volunteers did to clean up our beaches after the Fourth of July Celebration. You said you found local driver’s licenses on the beach, how many did you find? There were four to five times more tourist in town this past weekend than locals. How can you be so sure that it is the locals littering our beaches? Our community has enough problems without demonizing the locals. I am willing to bet the tourist did their share of littering too. Thanks again for the clean up you and the volunteers did, but it was more tourist as well as some locals that litterd our beaches. Please be fair and objective.

  14. Skibum says - Posted: July 6, 2010

    You first have to understand how I define Tourist, Local and Resident. Tourist’s are our lifeblood whether we deal with them directly or not. Locals are here for the short term and usually fail to get involved, they will hem and haw about everything but fail to produce. Residents are what’s left to pick up the pieces. You are right about mostly tourists at the beaches but they, based on the last eleven years of clean up and 34 of living here, usually put their trash by the cans, there is just a lot of it. It’s usually the young locals that leave it on the beach or in the woods. The pile of trash I found was the worst I have seen on the sandy beach area and the most on the sandy beach and it was there I found the license. 34 years of going to Camp Rich you get to see a lot. Thanks.