THIS IS AN ARCHIVE OF LAKE TAHOE NEWS, WHICH WAS OPERATIONAL FROM 2009-2018. IT IS FREELY AVAILABLE FOR RESEARCH. THE WEBSITE IS NO LONGER UPDATED WITH NEW ARTICLES.

Winter arrives in Lake Tahoe and will be sticking around


image_pdfimage_print

The white stuff on the ground and in the trees throughout the Lake Tahoe Basin is snow — just in case people forgot what it looked like.

The sounds and sights of winter finally arrived Jan. 21. Snowmobiles were on city streets, private and public snowplows were doing a brisk business, bus stops had snowboarders waiting for a lift, shovels came out of the garage, and children were being pulled on saucers.

Pedestrians take a chance Jan. 21 crossing Highway 50 in South Lake Tahoe. Photo/Kathryn Reed

Snow is in the forecast for the basin through Tuesday. Highs will be in the mid-30s, with lows in the 20s.

For South Lake Tahoe residents wondering when their street might be plowed – keep wondering. The thousands of dollars spent on the GPS system for the machines were touted at the Jan. 17 City Council meeting as being installed. And they are. It’s just that the technology to allow people to track them online isn’t up and running.

Below are the rain and snow totals from the National Weather Service as of 11:30am Jan. 21:

Snow:

Soda Springs Ski Area — 8-12 inches

Incline Village — 7-12 inches

Sierra-at-Tahoe — 9 inches

Tahoe-Donner — 6-7 inches

Tahoe City — 3 inches

Truckee airport — 3 inches

Rain:

South Lake Tahoe — 4.30 inches

Homewood – 4 inches

Incline Village — 1.50 inches

Alpine Meadows — 1.13 inches.

— Kathryn Reed

 

image_pdfimage_print

About author

This article was written by admin

Comments

Comments (6)
  1. X LOCAL says - Posted: January 22, 2012

    Can’t wait for those fantastic GPS systems,they are sure to be helpful during snow removal.
    Sure would like to know the cost of that system ???????

  2. Snowshoe Trekker says - Posted: January 22, 2012

    I live off North Upper Truckee and for the first time in a long while we were plowed on the same day as the storm. Usually we had to wait a minimum of 2 days and with the amount of snow received I would have thought they would not even have plowed. I hope the great service continues!

  3. dumbfounded says - Posted: January 23, 2012

    I am intimately familiar with GPS tracking systems. What I cannot understand is how spending thousands of dollars on something that does not remove snow is going to help remove snow. Systems like this are entirely too expensive to do anything positive for our tiny bus system or our city plows that cannot be done simply by a person. Hopefully, the county will not get involved and, instead, will continue the high level of service that they have for my 35 years here.

  4. Robert (Bob) Fleischer says - Posted: April 26, 2012

    I can see the GPS system for the snowplows as helpful to many residents, but I have not heard a word since late January on the situation. I am guessing it was not up and running this past Winter. What is the status?

  5. Steven says - Posted: April 26, 2012

    Just more mindless spending by the city council. It will never end!

  6. 4-mer-usmc says - Posted: April 27, 2012

    I believe that Councilmember Cole’s and Grego’s terms on the City Council end in December 2012. I would highly recommend that eligible individuals unhappy with the City Council’s decision-making and management of SLT run for one of those two seats. Many people complain that it’s frequently the same people who serve on the City Council and are critical of those who are currently serving and this is the time for individuals wanting changes to begin sharing their suggestions on how they’d “fix” the City and offer the voting public a chance to vote for you and your ideas.