Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Activists seek resort rulings reversal

Squaw Valley’s owner planning condo hotels

- By Scott Sonner

RENO — Environmen­tal lawyers are urging a California appellate court to overturn a pair of District Court rulings that handed victories to the Squaw Valley ski resort as it moves forward with expansion plans critics say will increase traffic in the area and harm Lake Tahoe’s air and water quality.

Justice Vance W. Raye, chief of the Third District Court of Appeals, appeared sympatheti­c to their arguments this week that Placer County may have violated a public records law in approving part of an environmen­tal analysis and mitigation plan at the home of the 1960 Winter Olympics.

The three-member panel didn’t offer any clues about its take on Sierra Watch’s broader challenge accusing the developer of intentiona­lly failing to adequately assess the effects on the nearby lake and downplayin­g the potential for dangerous delays during a wildfire evacuation.

A Placer County judge backed the county’s handling of both matters in 2018 rulings related to plans approved for Alterra Mountain Co., the Denver-based owner of Squaw Valley. It plans to build 850 units in high-rise condo hotels in what is the parking lot of the ski resort six miles north of Lake Tahoe.

Sierra Watch has been fighting the expansion since it first was proposed in 2012 and approved by the Placer County supervisor­s in 2016.

The group argues that the developer was required to analyze the effects on the Lake Tahoe Basin — including the alpine lake that holds enough water to cover California a foot deep — though the resort lies outside the basin itself.

“The project still affects the basin. It’s not bound by the project’s footprint itself,” Sierra Watch attorney Daniel Selmi told the appellate panel Wednesday.

Opponents say the developmen­t will double the population of Olympic Valley. They say 40 percent of the new traffic generated will travel into the basin, increasing the amount of sediment transporte­d to the lake and raising nitrate emissions — two threats to Tahoe’s world-renowned clarity.

Yet the environmen­tal review’s 83-page section on hydrology/water quality has a single reference to Lake Tahoe — mentioning that the Truckee River runs past the resort downstream from Tahoe, Selmi said.

“That’s it — no other reference to Lake Tahoe,” he said. “They virtually ignored it.”

The county’s review concluded the expansion would add an average of 1,353 daily car trips. It acknowledg­ed it could take more than 10 hours to evacuate via the single access road during a wildfire.

Whit Manley, an attorney for Squaw Valley Real Estate, who argued the developer’s case, said they conducted four years of environmen­tal review on an initial plan to build 1,295 units but scaled that back based on public input to 850.

He said 85 percent of the expansion is planned on land that is already developed.

“Most of it is a parking lot surrounded by ski runs and bare rock. That is where the developmen­t is going to occur. Not in the forest,” he told the panel.

Manley acknowledg­ed the area is designated as a severe fire hazard area.

But “that designatio­n in and of itself doesn’t mean an impact on evacuation­s has to be found significan­t or unavoidabl­e,” he said.

In the other case, Sierra Watch maintains the county violated California’s Brown Act by failing to comply with the mandate that public documents be made available for public inspection.

It centers on the sudden notice that the county supervisor­s would vote on a plan by the developers to pay $440,000 to the state’s attorney general for mitigation on other projects in the Tahoe area to offset the effects of increased resort traffic.

Robert Perlmutter, another lawyer for the group, said the sole action the county took was to place a copy in a closed and locked office at 5:42 p.m. the evening before the board of supervisor­s voted on the matter.

The memo “was not made available in any real sense,” he said.

Deputy County Attorney Clayton Cook said the Brown Act, a federal law that governs the release of informatio­n to the public, clearly said that if a new document item is added less than 72 hours before a meeting, it “should be made available for public inspection” by placing the document in a file in a public office.

“The facts show compliance,” he said.

Raye asked that if the county truly “made it available even if you have no means to obtain access to it?”

“Yes, that is our position,” Cook replied. “To require the county to do something else, would require some other reading” of the statute.

Raye responded: “Is it much of a strain of the statute to interpret that available means what available means? The writing must be accessible. If it’s in an office but not accessible to the public, it’s not available.”

 ?? Haven Daley The Associated Press file ?? The owner of the Squaw Valley ski resort, which hosted the 1960 Winter Olympics, plans to build 850 units in condo hotels in what is now the resort’s parking lot.
Haven Daley The Associated Press file The owner of the Squaw Valley ski resort, which hosted the 1960 Winter Olympics, plans to build 850 units in condo hotels in what is now the resort’s parking lot.

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