Poker run to benefit Austin’s House

The 8th annual Poker Run to benefit Austin’s House is Sept. 20.

All types of vehicles are welcome to join in the fun. Registration is from 9-10am in the parking lot at Century 21 Clark Properties located at 1674 Highway 395 in Minden.

The entry fee is $30 plus $20 for a second rider. The fee includes a prize for the best poker hand, barbecue lunch, limited edition ride pin, pink bandana and music by Trippin’ King Snakes.

The first stop for the 2014 Poker Run will be Nevada’s Oldest Thirst Parlor in Genoa. The next draw will take place at Jethro’s in the Gardnerville Ranchos. The caravan then heads south on Highway 88 to Markleeville and a stop at the Wolf Creek Restaurant & Bar. The run continues over Monitor Pass down to Topaz Lake for the fourth stop at Iggy & Squiggy’s Holbrook Junction Bar. The final stop is Heritage Park in Gardnerville where lunch will be served with live music. The Poker Run is approximately 81 miles and lasts about two hours.

For more info, call Danny Villalobos at 775.721.7111.

Austin’s House is the only emergency children’s shelter in rural Northern Nevada.




Recession a boon to conservation groups in Sierra

By Hudson Sangree, Sacramento Bee

The catastrophic collapse in real estate prices that started in 2007 left more than a legacy of mass foreclosures in the Sacramento region; it also left vast expanses of newly preserved open space in the Sierra Nevada that the public can use for recreation.

Depressed land prices allowed private conservation groups to snap up thousands of acres, much of which had once been planned for housing. The properties stretch along the Interstate 80 corridor from the crest of the mountains to the town of Truckee, north to the Feather River and south toward Lake Tahoe. The parcels form a quasi-public park system – one owned by nonprofit groups but accessible to the public, mostly free of charge.

“Increasingly, land protected for the public benefit is owned by private charitable organizations,” said Tom Mooers, executive director of Sierra Watch, a Nevada City-based group that’s played a leading role in recent conservation efforts.

The nonprofits’ holdings include the 3,000-acre Royal Gorge cross-country ski resort. Developers paid $35 million for the property at the height of the housing bubble in 2005 and planned to build 950 condominiums and single-family houses. Then the market collapsed, making the arduous task of building atop Donner Summit infeasible.

The Bay Area developers who owned the land were ready to unload it, and conservation groups were eager to buy. They agreed to pay $11.25 million in the summer of 2011, near the bottom of the real estate market.

Read the whole story

 




Cement truck overturns on Hwy. 89

A cement truck overturned Sept. 9 on Highway 89 near Baldwin Beach. Photo/Kathryn reed

A cement truck overturned Sept. 9 on Highway 89 near Baldwin Beach. Photo/Kathryn Reed

A rig carrying cement missed a turn on Highway 89 and rolled over Tuesday morning.

The driver sustained minor injuries. A colleague took him to Barton Memorial Hospital.

California Highway Patrol Officer Wayne Tillman said alcohol was not an factor in the Sept. 9 accident that happened after 9am.

“He didn’t make the turn,” Tillman told Lake Tahoe News. “Technically the speed limit is 55 mph, but that doesn’t mean it is safe for conditions.”

Tillman said with the 9 yards of concrete, it would make for a heavy load for the driver, plus the truck is much higher than a normal passenger vehicle. Multiple tow trucks were on the scene.

The accident occurred just north of Baldwin Beach. The truck was headed south, crossed into oncoming traffic and was resting on its side on the east side of the highway.

— Lake Tahoe News staff report




Scientists figuring out evolution of caffeine

By Carl Zimmer, New York Times

Every second, people around the world drink more than 26,000 cups of coffee. And while some of them may care only about the taste, most use it as a way to deliver caffeine into their bloodstream. Caffeine is the most widely consumed psychoactive substance in the world.

Many of us get our caffeine fix in tea, and still others drink mate, brewed from the South American yerba mate plant. Cacao plants produce caffeine, too, meaning that you can get a mild dose from eating chocolate.

Caffeine may be a drug, but it’s not the product of some underworld chemistry lab; rather, it’s the result of millions of years of plant evolution. Despite our huge appetite for caffeine, however, scientists know little about how and why plants make it.

A new study is helping to change that. An international team of scientists has sequenced the genome of Coffea canephora, one of the main sources of coffee beans. By analyzing its genes, the scientists were able to reconstruct how coffee gained the biochemical equipment necessary to make caffeine.

The study, published Thursday in the journal Science, sheds light on how plants evolved to make caffeine as a way to control the behavior of animals — and, indirectly, us.

Read the whole story




Snippets about Lake Tahoe

trta• Amber Monforte of South Lake Tahoe, who is a nurse at Barton Memorial Hospital, set a record for the fastest time by a woman to complete the Tahoe Rim Trail – 49:17 – from Sept. 5-7.

• Danette Winslow is St. Theresa Catholic Church’s director of Religious Education.

• Truckee is hosting a workshop-open house on Sept. 22 at 5:30pm regarding the housing element. The meeting will be at the town hall.

• Here are the El Dorado Tahoe and Sierra roadwork schedules from Caltrans for this week.

• Tahoe Choir rehearsals begin Sept. 16 for the December concerts. All are welcome, no auditions. Rehearsals are very Tuesday from 7-9:30pm at Lake Tahoe Community College, Room F120, South Lake Tahoe. Dues are $25 or enroll in Mus-141A.




Sass: Create a vision the South Shore agrees on

Publisher’s note: Lake Tahoe News asked the seven South Lake Tahoe City Council candidates a series of questions. All are the same except for one that is specific to each candidate. The responses are being run in the order LTN received them.

austin sassName: Austin Sass

Profession/work experience: Work experience: I am currently retired, but started my career in sales and marketing management and was fortunate enough to be given the opportunity to progress to executive management before returning to Lake Tahoe where I worked locally for several tourism and recreation companies. Details are below.
2008-2011 Aramark Lake Tahoe, NV director of Sales and Marketing
2002-2008 Heavenly, Vail Resorts, SLT, CA director of Resort Sales
2000-2002 Furniturefan Inc. Sudbury, MA senior vice president
1997-2000 Maptech Greenland, NH vice president
1992-1997 Spacelabs Medical Redmond, WA general manager
1991-1992 Meredith Corporation, LA, CA senior sales and marketing manager
1987-1991 Hearst Corporation, Santa Monica, CA western sales manager
1984-1986 Yale University Athletic Department, New Haven, CT manager of sales and marketing

Age: 61

What organizations, committees or groups are you or have you been involved with?: City of South Lake Tahoe Planning Commission, Lake Tahoe Unified School District School Bond Oversight Committee, Ecotourism Committee, Lake Tahoe South Shore Chamber of Commerce, St. Theresa’s Food Pantry volunteer, Lake Tahoe Visitors Authority Sales Committee, Little League coach South Lake Tahoe

Why are you running for City Council?: I am running for City Council because I care. This is my home and will be my home for the rest of my life. I love it here.

I am passionate about South Lake Tahoe and I would like to contribute to its future by utilizing my professional experience in management and tourism and my passion for all things that are recreation. I think I can help avoid the mistakes of the past and work to improve the future.

Why should people vote for you over the other candidates?:
• I have the time and will devote my energy to be thoroughly informed and do the job well.
• I am not aligned with any business entity and will cast votes based on what’s best for locals.
• Like many of us, I came to Tahoe because of its beauty and recreational opportunities. As a 30-year local and avid hiker, biker and skier, I want to help us develop fiscally smart recreational improvements and ideas. If we improve the recreation experience, we will improve our lives, have more to market and tourism dollars will follow.
• City surveys have shown that we want improvements to our infrastructure and our preference is that tourists pay for these improvements. I have worked in most of the tourism industry as a manager for many years gaining valuable experience on how the tourist and tourism companies think. As we look to raise revenues to improve our city, I would like to use that expertise for our advantage.
• The city is a business. Professionally, I have over 25 years managing businesses. I understand the business of contracts, budgets, strategic plans, and building a team. I would hope these experiences could benefit the city.
• I am fiscally conservative with an independent spirit ready to preserve the environment and deliver reliable core city services.

What do you think is the most pressing issue facing South Lake Tahoe and how will you deal with it?: Money: things we can’t keep pushing down the road are street improvements, storm water runoff, city equipment (fire, snow, police, road repair), code enforcement, recreational facilities like our rec center, and bike paths.

We also need money to deal with the $50 million-plus in unfunded liabilities we face with employees past and current.

Dealing with it is really about expenses and revenue. On the expense side, we can’t afford to waste any more money. Consultants, parking meters, poor capital purchases, studies and more studies. We need to watch every penny and make sure the expense was justified and necessary. Renegotiating debt and employee benefits are expenses we should continue to lower if we can and it’s fair.

On the revenue side, if you keep reading you’ll see my thoughts on revenue increases.

If the city cannot reach an agreement with its bargaining units, are you willing to go to impasse? Why or why not?: There is no choice about impasse. If the city and the bargaining units cannot agree, there is a process where a state appointed person makes an opinion on whether or not it was a fair discussion by both parties. If the appointee concludes that both sides were acting fairly and cannot reach a deal, the city has the right to impose their offer on the employees.

I don’t know what the current offers are since these discussions are confidential and behind closed doors. I sincerely hope the city and the bargaining units have been negotiating fairly and will be able to reach a compromise position that works for both sides. An impasse is never a good result in negotiations.

How would you resolve the CalPERS and health care issues in the city?: CalPERS — The state of California won’t let cities lower their CalPERS contribution and increase the amount employees pitch in. Gov. [Jerry] Brown tried to get cities the right to do this but the California state Legislature voted it down. This was part of the Pension Reform Act he proposed. I think employees should pay more toward CalPERS and be in line with what most people pay into Social Security in the private sector. At this point, if City Council concurs, South Lake Tahoe might join the growing list of cities trying to get the California Legislature to support Gov. Brown’s proposal. I am willing to put myself out there and explain the financial impacts and demand the legislature allow us to do this.

Health care – So let’s look at the current state of things. Forty-nine years ago the city decided to become self-insured rather than contract with an outside firm like Blue Shield. The city pays the medical costs for all employees and because we are a small pool, we have less negotiating room with health care providers. That idea was flawed.
Also, a long time ago the city agreed to insure retired employees, their family and dependents (about 30 years ago). As more and more employees retired it became part of the labor contracts. The city pays the medical bills. There is no insurance provider. The labor agreements also said if you work for the city for 25 years, it’s 100 percent coverage. At 20 years, 90 percent. The cost of medical care has gone up about 200 percent over the past 25 years. There are only a handful of cities in the state that do this.

In 2001 the city said going forward with new hires we will only cover the employee and no longer the dependents. In 2007 a new provision limiting city outlay was put in for employees hired after January 2008.

However, despite the changes, the city faces a 50-year liability with retired employees and those actively employed prior to 2008. The current cost of the plan to the city is $19,000 per active and retired employee and their dependents. The current outlay by the city is $5 million annually. Looking back, prior councils never envisioned that retirees would live into their 80s rather than the 62-67 life expectancy back in the early ’70s. They also never foresaw medical costs going up 200 percent.

So going forward, the opportunity to reduce the city’s outlay and to reduce the unfunded medical liabilities is to renegotiate health care with the current employees. This is because the current contracts state that retirees get the same health care plan as current employees.

It’s never desirable to change a retiree’s benefit and I agree it is unfair because retirees generally are living on a fixed income. However, the other choices are current residents pay higher taxes to fund the generous health care coverage, current employees agree to pay more so retirees keep the same benefits, the city does a Detroit and could eventually be forced to file bankruptcy. I am willing to make employees pay for some of their medical care. It’s a tough, call but not many employees get coverage covered 100 percent by their employer.

What is your opinion about term limits for the council?: I support term limits.

If the city has positive cash flow, where should the money be spent?: Capital investment in our infrastructure. We have been deferring maintenance for too long.

What are your ideas for increasing the city’s revenues?: City surveys have shown that residents want improvements, but do not want to pay for them. They want tourists to pay for them.

Given that, I think we need to have city staff look at revenue and cost projections as a result of a fee or tax on everything from sightseeing tours, recreational vehicle and equipment rentals, lodging, dining and vacation home rentals. Everything the tourist spends money on. Once we have a forecast, we need to decide what will produce bottom line revenues without causing too much pain on tourists and not affecting the pocketbooks and space of locals.

Another thing I would do is start enforcing our own ordinances. For example, the vacation home rental ordinances. I’m sure there are thousands of dollars in fines that could be levied every weekend if monitored at the right time and on the right day. Too many cars, too much noise and too much garbage not put out properly. Not only would it raise money, but it would make our local quality of life better. Personally, I am tired of people treating my neighborhood like a fraternity house.

Finally, it’s time to really put the recreation foot forward and attract people to Tahoe to enjoy the natural surroundings, the hiking, biking, and the water sports. We need to work cooperatively with Douglas and El Dorado counties to utilize all of our fields and facilities for more events and tournaments.

I support the creation of a sports and recreation commission to develop a plan that would drive revenues for the sole purpose of improving and maintaining our recreational uses. We need better sales and marketing. Second, paint a better picture of our options even when they are not in the city. The Rim Trail and our hiking is under promoted, our mountain bike trails have limited accessibility and visibility. We need to work closer with TAMBA, the bike coalition, the LTVA, our fishing charter entrepreneurs, our watercraft rental companies, the USFS, the lodging community and others to make it perfectly clear that we are one of America’s All Year Playgrounds.

We need to put our collective experience, market insight and combined expertise to better put our products out there.

What is your vision for the 56-acre project?: That depends on budget. It’s county land and the City Council needs to decide if we should invest funds in lands we do not own. The first step is to find out what the county is willing to pay for, if anything, and then we need to renegotiate the MOU with the county. We need to clarify if the city will eventually own the land or is it a long-term lease or status quo. As it stands now, we pay the maintenance, which burdens the budget.

If I had a magic wand, I would relocate the campground to somewhere a little quieter and move Highway 50 away from the lake. I would turn it into a big park with grassy areas to sit in and playfields and connect it with Lakeview Commons. I would make the needed improvements to the current facilities and turn the project into something that would draw sports tournaments and events to South Lake Tahoe.

Right now it’s in limbo. I would want to work with the county to move the project on.

What would you do to improve relations with El Dorado County?: I think you need to start communicating with them first. Our elected and their elected need to develop good working relationships. That means taking the time to get to know them so that the sharing of ideas can occur.

In the business world people get together for lunch or coffee not to thank someone for their business, but to develop a working relationship with them. It’s easier to have a frank conversation with someone once there is a level of trust and respect for them. That does not come from meeting once a year.

Is the city on the right course with restructuring debt and focusing on recreation? Why or why not?: Yes to both.

Restructuring debt is a no brainer as long as you are not selling the future to lower your payments today. We need to refinance and take advantage of lower interest rates where it makes sense.

We are never going to have factories or large production facilities. People are not going to come here just to gamble. They can do that anywhere. It’s about the lakes, the mountains, the forest and getting outside. To me recreation is what we have to offer and that is what brings tourists here and gets them to spend a few nights.

Name one vote the City Council made in the last four years you are proud of and one you are disappointed in – and why?: I am proud that the City Council voted on the Harrison Avenue project. The council took a risk and once the businesses invest in themselves the area will look great. The project also dealt with some of the environmental issues regarding runoff.

I was disappointed in the decision to install parking meters. The program was so upsetting to locals that we had an uprising like this town has never seen. I think the council missed the boat on this one. I’m also disappointed that council never had a plan in case the meters were removed. Now we have wasted $250,000 and have to pay to remove them. An exit strategy should have been formulated when council agreed to revisit the parking kiosk program at the time they voted to put them in.

What is working in the city and what isn’t; and how would you go about changing what isn’t working?: The city is not committed to economic development. We need to engage the community more and help people who want to invest or reinvest in businesses. It’s hard to do business here because we are so regulated. We need to help businesses thrive. We need to build partnerships.

One thing I would like to accomplish is the creation of a vision plan that the entire South Shore can agree on. Investors want predictability and a plan for the future. I would want to push hard for the city and the two counties to come together and develop a plan for the future. Bring in the business community, the environmental entities and the public works people and let’s figure out how to move forward. Communication and cooperation!

What’s working is that the city is slowly looking better. Caltrans has made a big difference on Highway 50. The city’s work on Lakeview Commons, Pioneer Trail and Harrison Avenue has really made things look better and work better for locals and tourists.

Being on the council requires working with four others. Give readers an example of how you work well others in difficult situations with differing opinions: Being part of a large business/company (like the city is) requires effective negotiating within your own organization both with people you work with, work for, and oversee.

An example of this is with the launch of a new product. I was general manager at a company in Seattle. We had an idea for a new product. Sales wanted it to look sleek and new, manufacturing wanted to be able to produce it using current assembly line processes and at a set and constant cost, engineering wanted to integrate a new and expensive technology, service wanted to be able to do diagnostics via the Web, retailers wanted the footprint as small as possible and my CEO wanted to make 24 percent annually after all costs.

Everyone had their own priorities. As the senior manager of the division I needed to understand everyone’s concerns, I needed to make everyone a hero, I needed everyone to compromise to achieve the greater goal. Everyone could not get everything they wanted, but with patience, good listening skills and passion for the end product I was able to introduce the product with tremendous results. In the end, the concept of team and working for the greater good sealed the deal. Sometimes it’s about leaving your ego at the front door and just doing what’s best for your company or in our case, the city of South Lake Tahoe.

What is your opinion about the following topics:
• Ferry service on Lake Tahoe?: Good idea if we can figure out where the boats will dock, where cars will park and how to ensure low lake levels don’t ground the ferries. As important, how do we pay for it? If we can figure this all out, it will help the environment and be a cool tourist attraction.

• Loop road?: If I had to vote today, there is not a loop road plan I could support. Personally, I don’t think we will see a loop road anytime soon. There is no funding.

• Future of Lake Tahoe Airport?: Hopefully we have paid our last consultant regarding the airport. We need to figure out how the city can offset the expenses associated with it.

• Increasing the transient occupancy tax?: I’m open to the idea as long as the money is earmarked to drive tourism.

• Changing the vacation rental ordinance to reduce the number of such units in neighborhoods?: I don’t think that is realistic given that over 65 percent of our homes are second homes. I would be happy if we started enforcing the ordinances and changing mindset of the guests staying in our neighborhoods.

You boast of being the man who understands multimillion-dollar budgets, but you have only been in middle management, not the person making the final decision. Can you explain your real budgetary experience?: Wow! You are misinformed LTN. Three times in my professional career I have been in executive management where I was responsible for creation, justification, management and held accountable for the bottom line. That’s fact, not fiction LTN.

Approving and understanding the budget is arguably the most important job City Council does. I don’t look at a budget and get glassy-eyed. I like budgets and pride myself in understanding every line item and the detail behind them. I feel I know what questions to ask and will not approve a city budget unless it fiscally conservative, can be supported by fact, is based on actuals from prior year and has realistic revenue forecasts. I feel confident I can do this because of my experience and my familiarity with our local economy.

Tell the voters something about yourself that they may not know: I love to cook.

 




Opinion: DA challenges media credibility

By Vern Pierson

On Sept. 5, the following letter to the editor was submitted to and received by the Sacramento Bee:

A June 2014 Gallup Poll confirms that Americans have lost confidence in the news media. Across newspapers, TV, and the Internet, confidence is less than 22 percent. In fact, confidence in newspapers has declined by more than half since its peak of 51 percent in 1979. These results are not surprising given that the reporting of news far too often seeks to enflame, influence, or entertain the reader, rather than to inform them of the actual facts.

Vern Pierson

Vern Pierson

On Sept. 3, the Sacramento Bee ran an editorial endorsing a candidate for El Dorado County Board of Supervisor’s District 2. As part of that endorsement, the Bee erroneously, and without any factual support, asserted that the prosecution and conviction of former Supervisor Ray Nutting was politically motivated. The Sac Bee editorial staff is entitled to their own opinion, however uninformed, but not to their own facts.

Let’s be clear about the facts: prior to the indictment of Ray Nutting, the El Dorado County District Attorney’s Office contacted the California Attorney General’s Office and presented the evidence of the case to a deputy attorney general – a career white collar crime prosecutor who was involved in the early public corruption investigation of the city of Bell officials. It was after these initial meetings that the joint decision was made by the Attorney General’s Office, a state agency, and the DA’s Office, a county agency, to move forward with the case by presenting it to an El Dorado County Grand Jury. Prior to the grand jury, the Attorney General’s Office and the DA’s Office reached out to Mr. Nutting and his attorney to request any and all exculpatory evidence to present to the grand jury.

Everything presented by Mr. Nutting and his attorney was given to the grand jury in May 2013. Further, Mr. Nutting was given an opportunity to present his side of the case and testify before the Grand Jury, yet he chose to take the Fifth and refused to testify.

Then in May 2013, the grand jury, made up of 19 members of the public and selected at random, heard the evidence and indicted Ray Nutting. After the indictment, a judge set Mr. Nutting’s bail at $55,000 (which is the bail schedule amount for the crimes he was indicted on) and signed a warrant for the arrest of Mr. Nutting, who was well aware of his pending arrest for weeks before the indictment. Mr. Nutting broke the law when he obtained loans from county employees and a public works contractor.

His wife, the person now endorsed by the Sac Bee, then showed up to the jail with 550 $100 bills to pay his bail in cash. The jury convicted Ray Nutting of six criminal counts related to these illegal loans. In its inexplicable support for Nutting, the Sac Bee has refused in two separate editorials to acknowledge the active participation throughout the trial of the California Attorney General ‘s Office in the prosecution and conviction of Ray Nutting. The first time the Bee did this was while the Nutting jury was still deliberating on a verdict – in what appeared to be a blatant attempt to influence the jury verdict. Now, the Bee once again ignores the involvement of the Attorney General’s Office in an apparent effort to prop up their endorsement of a candidate.

Notably, in another recent local political corruption case involving school board member Cortez Quinn – with facts eerily similar to the Nutting case as it involved submitting false documents under penalty of perjury and $55,000 in illegal loans — the Sac Bee demanded that Quinn resign on Nov. 7, 2013, less than 48 hours after his arrest. Why the immediate condemnation within 48 hours of arrest for one politician, and yet the ardent support for another politician long after his conviction and removal from office?

The involvement of the Attorney General’s Office in the prosecution and conviction of Ray Nutting is of great significance. Absence any evidence in support, the Bee trashes the integrity of career prosecutors at the El Dorado County District Attorney’s Office with false claims of a politically motivated prosecution. The Bee is keenly aware that it is much easier to impugn local prosecutors and make false claims than it would be to make the same assertions against the California Attorney General’s Office. What is the attorney general’s motivation to prosecute a small time supervisor in a relatively small California County? The answer is – there isn’t one. The Bee ignores this fact again and again.

Why does the Bee ignore the fact that Ray Nutting never filed a motion to recuse the El Dorado County District Attorney’s Office? The answer is – because he would have lost that motion as the prosecution of former supervisor Nutting was not politically motivated. Why does the Sac Bee blatantly ignore these facts in two separate editorials? Is it based upon the relationship of Ray Nutting to a Sac Bee employee? Is it just an attempt to sell more newspapers claiming there is some political feud up in El Dorado County? Or, is it just another example of the shoddy journalism that is causing Americans to lose confidence in the media?

Regardless of the reason, the message to dedicated career prosecutors across the region considering whether or not to investigate or file charges against the politically powerful is that their actions will be evaluated by the Sacramento Bee in an uninformed and biased manner. Prosecutions of political figures are never taken lightly. The facts and law are often complicated. The defendant is often a charismatic popular person. The El Dorado County District Attorney’s Office did exactly what should be done in the political corruption case of Ray Nutting. Investigate potential crimes. Involve the California Attorney General’s Office in the case to have an additional objective and outside prosecutor involved in the case and evaluate the facts. Find a fair and impartial Judge to rule on the case. And, ultimately, give defendant Nutting his day in court in front of a jury of his peers.

Those jurors convicted Nutting, and the judge removed Nutting from office. The 3rd District Court of Appeal and recently the California Supreme Court have affirmed the order removing Nutting from office. As noted by the American Bar Association, “The duty of a prosecutor is to seek justice, not merely convict.”

There’s more to being a prosecutor than getting a conviction. Every prosecutor in our office understands our role is first and foremost the pursuit of justice. Justice sometimes means the dismissal of a factually provable offense and other times it’s holding accountable the politically powerful. The latter is precisely what happened in this case.

Vern Pierson is district attorney for El Dorado County.




South Lake Tahoe to celebrate Patriots Day

There will be a Patriots Day ceremony Sept. 11 at 11am at the American Legion Post 795 in South Lake Tahoe.

The observance was created after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

South Lake Tahoe Police Chief Brian Uhler and Fire Chief Jeff Meston will be speaking.

 




Drought forcing Tahoe marinas to dredge

The following is an update from Lahontan Regional Water Quality Control Board in regards to dredging on the California side of Lake Tahoe:

  • Obexer’s Marina – issued dredging authorization April 23.
  • Meeks Bay — authorized dredging May 23; completed, included a beach replenishment.
  • Tahoe City — authorized dredging Aug. 8. Had an incomplete application in May so once all the information was gathered they didn’t get approved until August. They have not dredged yet.
  • Tahoe Keys Property Owners Association – issued authorization with beach replenishment Sept. 8.
  • Tahoe Keys Marina — no applications.



El Dorado’s political drama comes to climax Tues.

By Peter Hecht, Sacramento Bee

The questions linger after a tumultuous political and legal drama in El Dorado County. They dangle amid the clutter of campaign signs on hillsides along Highway 50 and beneath Ponderosa pines on back-country roads.

What is the mood of this county after a veteran supervisor, Ray Nutting, was put on trial and stripped from office in what supporters called a political prosecution? What are the challenges of this Sierra foothills region, the birthplace of the Gold Rush, where grass-roots revolts now roil over a proposed residential development boom?

On Tuesday, voters will choose among six candidates in an extraordinary special election to replace Nutting. The winner will take office immediately and serve out the last two years and four months of the former District 2 supervisor’s term.

The candidates include his wife, Jennifer Nutting, owner of a Pollock Pines hair salon and an outspoken critic of what she claims is a county culture of political bullying that led to her husband’s prosecution.

Ray Nutting, 54, a four-term county supervisor, was acquitted on three felony counts for failing to properly disclose more than $70,000 in state income he received for brush-clearing on the family’s 340-acre timber ranch in Somerset. But a judge ordered him expelled from office June 6 because of misdemeanor convictions for improperly raising $55,000 in bail money from two county employees and a construction contractor doing business with the county.

Now the other special election candidates – winery owner Dave Pratt, manufacturing executive Claire McNeal, automotive shop owner George Turnboo, database systems consultant Chris Amaral and Web hosting company owner Shiva Frentzen – are trying to refocus the election to matters other than the Nutting saga.

Read the whole story