Las Vegas Review-Journal

Study reports big progress in Lake Tahoe trash cleanup

- By Suzie Dundas

Tahoe community organizati­ons ranging from business associatio­ns to nonprofits to kayak rental companies have long been begging the lake’s visitors to be more responsibl­e with picking up their trash. And now, the results of a two-year study and monitoring project in Lake Tahoe could suggest that the messaging may be working.

The findings come from Clean Up The Lake’s two-year project that sent scuba divers to clean up trash in 30 “litter hot spots” between 0 and 25 feet deep along Lake Tahoe’s shoreline. Hot spots were areas of heavier-than-normal trash, identified via diver observatio­ns and garbage data. The first sweep was finished in July 2021, and the second was completed in fall 2023.

The study found a significan­t decrease in litter over the twoyear period on the Nevada side of the lake (the California areas have not yet been analyzed).

The trash collected on the Nevada side’s 20 hot spots totaled 879.5 pounds of litter in 2023 — a steep drop from 2021’s haul of 2,937 pounds. According to West, unofficial early analysis from the California side, which studied another 10 hot spots, also shows a decrease.

The change could be for any number of reasons. Local nonprofits like the Tahoe Fund, which has spent millions on environmen­tal awareness campaigns since 2010, hope it’s a sign that recreators are taking their messaging to heart.

“I do think people are being more careful,” said Caitlin Meyer, chief program officer for the Tahoe Fund. She credits Clean Up The Lake’s ongoing efforts, as well as comprehens­ive messaging. “Their successful work, along with ongoing public awareness campaigns around trash, have certainly drawn attention to the issue,” she added, “and I do think people are being more careful.”

West agrees and hopes the results will encourage more support for the next stage of the proj

“I do think people are being more careful.”

Caitlin Meyer, chief program officer, the Tahoe Fund

ect: to survey and clean trash at depths of up to 75 feet. He thinks the year-over-year numbers prove that scuba diving cleanups by hand can be an effective method for bettering freshwater lakes that serve as water sources. “So this is a big win for the work we do at Clean Up The Lake,” he said, regardless of whether it’s credited to visitor education or just better cleaning.

“When we think of why, it could be a variety of reasons that are harder to prove,” West said. “One that I would say is a surefire reason is that the litter we cleaned in 2021 had never really been cleaned before. We were probably cleaning 30-40 years of it accumulati­ng.” But he also doesn’t want to write off possible improvemen­ts in visitor behavior. “Maybe it could be that people are finally getting the message to pick up and be better stewards.”

One area designated as a hot spot is the shoreline off of Zephyr Cove Resort, from which volunteers pulled more than 8,000 pounds of trash after the Fourth of July in 2023. West says it showed significan­tly more litter than other sites within the national forest land but that the most trashed areas were around heavy public use areas, like piers and resort docks. Had volunteers not cleaned the beach immediatel­y after the holiday, he thinks the most recent results could have been much different. “Thank goodness we got that out before it made it deeper into the lake,” he added.

The announceme­nt comes on the heels of a second piece of good news in February, which showed that Echo Lakes near South Lake Tahoe are free from many of the pollution and climate change problems of Lake Tahoe. That study showed that the lakes are free of the highly invasive New Zealand mud snails and have a much lower concentrat­ion of trash left behind by visitors. It pulled just 36 pounds of litter from a half-mile section of Echo Lakes, compared with the 2021 average of 175.5 pounds in Lake Tahoe per half-mile. “Visitors to Echo Lakes appear to be fairly responsibl­e as a whole,” West said. “And the results suggest that current (invasive species management) programs appear to be yielding positive returns.”

 ?? HAVEN DALEY / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2022) ?? Debris and garbage collected during the Lake Tahoe cleanup is reflected in a sign displayed May 10, 2022, in Stateline. Clean Up The Lake’s study found a significan­t decrease in litter over a two-year period on the Nevada side of the lake (the California areas have not yet been analyzed).
HAVEN DALEY / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2022) Debris and garbage collected during the Lake Tahoe cleanup is reflected in a sign displayed May 10, 2022, in Stateline. Clean Up The Lake’s study found a significan­t decrease in litter over a two-year period on the Nevada side of the lake (the California areas have not yet been analyzed).

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