Las Vegas Review-Journal

New rules for Tahoe will enhance clarity, limit discharges

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

RENO — State and federal environmen­tal regulators at Lake Tahoe are moving ahead with another round of rules and strategies to protect the clarity of the mountain lake’s famed azure waters.

California water quality officials approved plans last week to reduce the amount of fine sediments discharged into the lake.

The Lahontan Regional Water Quality Control Board accepted the plans prepared by the city of South Lake Tahoe and El Dorado and Placer counties on the California side of the lake.

The goal is to cut sediments discharged into the lake from urban runoff by 30 percent in 15 years by making improvemen­ts of 10 percent every five years, The Reno Gazette-Journal reported.

“These pollutant load reduction plans represent an important step on the road to restoring Lake Tahoe’s clarity,” said Peter Pumphrey, chairman of the water board.

Tahoe’s waters were so clear in 1968 that one could see to depths of more than 100 feet. Runoff and algae associated with human developmen­t have reduced the average clarity in recent years to about 75 feet.

The new plans include evaluating the effectiven­ess of water quality improvemen­ts constructe­d in the communitie­s over the last five years, implementa­tion of new projects and enhancing operations and maintenanc­e of roadways.

Similar sediment control programs are being implemente­d by communitie­s on the Nevada side of the lake, including Incline Village and Stateline.

Also last week, new ordinances affecting land coverage and associated pollution at Tahoe took effect following the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s update of a broad-based water quality plan for the lake. That overall strategy also is designed in part to prevent discharge of fine sediments into Tahoe’s waters as well as introducti­on of nutrients that can fuel algae growth.

The ordinances provide a regulatory framework for issues associated with pavement or other impervious surfaces on land within Tahoe’s watershed that contribute­s to sediment-laden runoff. Changes will help guide redevelopm­ent of aging urban areas most responsibl­e for pollution of the lake and are in line with a new regional plan approved for the Tahoe Basin last November, according to Joanne Marchetta, executive director of the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency.

“The new rules are both better for the environmen­t and will help our struggling communitie­s reinvent themselves,” Marchetta said. “The basis of the regional plan is protecting the centerpiec­e of our ecosystem while revitalizi­ng our communitie­s.”

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