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South Tahoe devising plan for state line area


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By Kathryn Reed

Remove development on the lake to provide better views. Have hotels near bike-pedestrian paths. More access to public transportation. Boardwalks. More kayaking. Decrease the number of driveways at Bijou Center. Make Lakeside Beach public.

Those are some of the ideas the public came up with at a meeting Wednesday night in regards to the tourist core area, aka the state line section of South Lake Tahoe. The plan goes from Ski Run Boulevard to the Nevada border.

The city is on a mission to have the area plan for this part of town go to the Planning Commission in May, the City Council in July and the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency Governing Board in August.

South Lake Tahoe planner John Hitchcock talks March 20 about the Tourist Core Area Plan. Photo/LTn

South Lake Tahoe planner John Hitchcock talks March 20 about the Tourist Core Area Plan. Photo/LTN

“The intent of the area plan is not a vision plan, it’s an implementation plan,” John Hitchcock, planner for the city, told the approximately 40 people who were at the March 20 meeting at Lake Tahoe Airport.

Hitchcock went over how area plans are TRPA’s latest version of community plans, but with the goal of being more functional. With a new TRPA Regional Plan in place, area plans come with redevelopment incentives, increased height allowances in town centers and the goal of revamping what’s in place for environmental gain.

South Shore resident Jerome Evans is concerned no one has asked business owners if they want to move to what are being called town centers; and wonders why an economic study to prove or disapprove this approach to planning is good or bad was not done.

One goal of the plan will be to harness and capitalize on the recreation areas that exist – Heavenly Gondola; Van Sickle Bi-State Park – including access to the Tahoe Rim Trail; Edgewood Tahoe Golf Course – and the beach that will be public after the lodge is built; the lake; and Ski Run and Lakeside marinas.

After the nuts and bolts were talked about, the mass of people went into the lobby area to write on maps, fill out comment cards and ask officials questions. The three main areas were land use planning and community design; conservation-water quality; and transportation-recreation.

Sharon Doughty, co-owner of the Ski Run Center that is anchored by the Red Hut Café, told City Manager Nancy Kerry after the group session that she is worried the plan will eliminate mom and pop businesses. Doughty fears the town centers will be high rent districts.

“Our goal is not to get rid of anything except something that is on very sensitive land,” Kerry said. “We don’t want to plan for the outcome, but instead plan for the opportunity to occur.”

 

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Comments

Comments (5)
  1. tahoeadvocate says - Posted: March 21, 2013

    Little boys don’t tuck their shirts in. City employees should or they have no credibility.

  2. Chief Slowroller says - Posted: March 21, 2013

    sounds like more of the same LOOP ROAD CRAP

  3. mrs.t says - Posted: March 21, 2013

    and the city will pay the business owners to relocate to these “town centers”?

  4. Lakeside Park Association says - Posted: March 21, 2013

    Lakeside Park Association (LPA) would like to address those who suggested “make Lakeside Beach public”.

    Why would you ask the City to spend Tens of Millions of dollars to buy beach front property and then have to pay to maintain it? Someone already does this for the City.

    Lakeside Beach is owned by the non-profit company Lakeside Park Association (LPA) which was formed in 1938. The members of LPA are the owners of the properties between Hwy 50 and the Lake and between Stateline and Park. These members pay to maintain the beach and yet they choose to open it to the public 12 months a year.

    Throughout the year LPA members pay beach property taxes, State Land Fees, salaries of local employees to keep the beach clean, salaries of lifeguards to keep beachgoers safe in the Summer, fees to provide a bathroom on the beach 12 months a year, garbage collection fees to haul away the trash left by the public all year, traffic control on July 4th and Labor Day since the City’s budget hasn’t allowed the police to staff it, as well as insurance to protect us if someone from the public sues us because something happened to them on our land. There are other costs too numerous to list here.

    During the peak tourist months we do charge the public a small fee to help us defray our costs. We are not doing it to make a profit, only to help cover a portion of our costs. If this is what you mean that you want it made public, then you should have really said you want the city to spend money it doesn’t have so you don’t have to pay to use the beach.

    You and the public are welcome year around. We only ask that you treat our property with the same care you would want us to treat yours and help us with some of the cost during peak tourist season.

    Please come and enjoy Lakeside Beach which is kid friendly with playground equipment all year and lifeguards during the summer.

    Andy Engelhardt
    Vice President
    Lakeside Park Association Board of Directors
    4077 Pine Blvd.
    South Lake Tahoe, CA 96150

  5. Bijou Bill says - Posted: March 21, 2013

    I heard that the fine folks at LPA are providing FREE admission to the beach for Memorial Day AND 4th of July this year!! That’s some REAL community spirit!