Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Tree Removal One Small Piece of Heavenly Expansion


by John Friedrich

published in the Tahoe Mountain News, April 2007

TRPA made the right decision to re-hear the extensive expansion plans of Heavenly, owned by Vail Corporation. When it was brought to TRPA’s attention that the agency violated California’s open meeting law (the Brown Act) at its February meeting, all TRPA Governing Board members – except for Mike Weber – voted for a new hearing on April 25. This will provide the public a fair and lawful opportunity to participate in the decision-making process. To their credit, Heavenly did not object.

The outcome of the April 25 hearing at TRPA will have an impact on Heavenly and the south shore for the next decade and beyond. While the fate of the old growth North Bowl stand has received the most scrutiny, Heavenly’s desire to build a new lift through the heart of that stand is but one small slice of the Resort’s overall construction plans.

While five alternative development plans were prepared for TRPA and Forest Service review, virtually all of Heavenly’s wish list is contained in each alternative. The only differences among the plan alternatives are whether the new North Bowl lift(s) will go through or around an old growth tree stand, and the size of the amphitheater planned for the top of the Gondola area (1100 or 2500 seats).

Otherwise, all alternatives under consideration would allow a 20% increase in construction footprint over what exists today on the steep, fragile slopes that drain down into Lake Tahoe. In this light, it stands to reason that each alternative meets or exceeds Heavenly’s overall objectives in the Master Plan update. Further, it’s not as if requiring Heavenly to select a lift alternative to bypass the North Bowl stand, while still allowing the vast majority of their plans, will make or break Vail Corporation -- which recently reported a 23% increase in profits over the 2nd quarter profits in the previous year.

Heavenly already has more lifts than any other Resort operating with the Tahoe area, and bills itself as having the “one of the largest snowmaking systems in the world, and certainly the largest in the West.” All alternatives for additional construction include:

  • More than 125 acres of acres of ski runs and lifts, 67 acres beyond what was approved in the 1996 Master Plan.
  • 45 new or expanded ski runs
  • 29.6 acres of additional snowmaking
  • 2 large new lodges
  • A 120 unit residential complex at the Stagecoach parking lot
  • 2 expanded lodge decks, a redeveloped lodge, skier services building, 1100 seat amphitheater, zip line, expanded maintenance shop, and more.

At a time when environmental scientists have determined that pollutants must be reduced by 35% to restore Lake Tahoe’s clarity, the extent of new planned construction at Heavenly presents a substantial environmental risk, regardless of which alternative is selected.

Despite concerns with the scope of Heavenly’s intended expansion, the Tahoe environmental community invested considerable time over the last 18 months not to stop Heavenly’s plans, but to make them better. Working collaboratively with Heavenly, the Forest Service, TRPA, and ski area erosion control specialist Michael Hogan, the environmental monitoring, mitigation and enforcement plan was strengthened.

But mitigation is not the right strategy for the whole mountain. In the most ecologically sensitive areas, such as the degraded and still recovering Edgewood Creek watershed where the North Bowl stand is located, avoiding or minimizing new impacts is the best strategy. Due to past degradation, TRPA has a current prohibition against new disturbance in the Edgewood Creek watershed that must be lifted before any lift or ski run alternatives can be adopted.

In addition, TRPA has strong protections on its books for old growth trees, which the agency defines as 24” diameter or greater for trees on the east side of the Basin, such as the North Bowl trees. To remove trees greater than 24” diameter for any project, including the 104 that would come out for the North Bowl Express Lift, TRPA must conclude that it is “necessary” for recreation activity, that the proposed action represents the “minimum removal” of trees, and that no “feasible” alternatives are available that avoid or minimize disturbance. It’s hard to make these findings when there are two viable alternatives available that accomplish Heavenly’s objective of moving skiers and boarders up the North Bowl faster, while sparing the old growth North Bowl stand.

Alternative 5 would upgrade the existing North Bowl and Olympic lifts with faster lifts in the current alignments, reducing the amount of new construction on currently undisturbed land in the Edgewood Creek– think of it as the redevelopment option. This alternative also includes a ski run alternative that goes around the stand. These lift and run choices would reduce the number of old growth acres to be cut and disturbed by 4.5 acres, and reduce the overall footprint of new disturbance in Edgewood Creek by about 225,000 square feet (the area to be cleared for the proposed lift).

Alternative 4A, the angled lift alternative prepared in response to an outpouring from the public, would also bypass the North Bowl late seral/old growth stand. A high-speed lift would replace the existing North Bowl lift, then angle from the North Bowl top station to the top of the existing Olympic lift.

Top TRPA staff have asserted that Alternative 4, which includes the lift through the old growth stand, would offset the cutting of old growth trees with greater watershed benefits than alternatives 4A or 5. However, the Environmental Impact Statement prepared for the project does not support this conclusion. Neither does the Environmental Protection Agency, which stated in a letter sent to the Forest Service on Feb. 26, “Because Alternative 4A and 5 are the least environmentally damaging of the alternatives considered, EPA recommends the selection of one of these alternatives as the preferred alternative.”

Check out the facts for yourself, and plan to speak out at the April 25 hearing at TRPA’s office.


Heavenly plan will be reconsidered!

TRPA reconsiders approval of Heavenly expansion, Reno Gazette Journal
By Jeff DeLong
March 29, 2007

http://news.rgj.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070329/TT/703290374/1047/NEWS

A controversial plan to cut more than a thousand trees to make room for a new ski lift at Lake Tahoe's Heavenly Mountain Resort will be considered again next month, the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency's governing board decided last week.

Facing a legal claim by environmentalists that last month's approval of the new lift and other upgrades at the resort was illegal, TRPA officials agreed to take another look at the project in April.

Agency lawyer Joanne Marchetta recommended the action "as an accommodation" to the public without giving any merit to the legal challenge filed last week by the League to Save Lake Tahoe, the Tahoe Area Sierra Club and the Sierra Nevada Alliance.

Otherwise, Marchetta said, it would be likely the conservation groups would sue TRPA and years of litigation over whether last month's vote violated open meeting regulations would ensue.

"This motion is being made in the interest of avoiding delay," Marchetta said.

Environmentalists praised the agency's decision to reconsider changes to Heavenly's master plan.

"I'm delighted. I think this will go a long way to restoring credibility to TRPA," said Michael Donahoe, a Sierra Club representative. "I'm hoping they will step up to the plate and do what's right for the environment."

Rochelle Nason, executive director of the League to Save Lake Tahoe, said the action will allow the organization to raise issues about impacts to Tahoe's water quality and old-growth timber.

"We're really heartened that the governing board did the right thing today for the public and for solid environmental decision-making," Nason said.

After a Feb. 28 hearing of nearly eight hours, board members approved Heavenly's request for major changes on the mountain. Central to the controversy was the resort's plans to remove two aging and slow fixed-grip lifts on the resort's Nevada side and replace them with a single high-speed quad lift.

Environmentalists oppose the project because it would entail removal of more than 1,100 trees, about 150 of them large and old trees of the type that were mostly logged out of the Tahoe Basin more than a century ago. They support different lift alignments that would impact far fewer trees.

Blaise Carrig, Heavenly's senior vice president and chief operating officer, said he was disappointed the board chose to void last month's approval, a vote he described as legitimate. But Carrig said the resort will go along with the decision to rehear the matter in April.

"We've always said we want to respect the process and we'll continue to show the merits of our proposal," Carrig said.

The new lift -- along with new ski runs, lodges and a cross-country ski center -- is described as critical to keeping Heavenly competitive in the global skiing market.

"It allows us to improve the recreational experience at the resort," Carrig said.

The hearing room Wednesday was again packed with people, many critical of last month's approval. During a public comment session, speakers attacked the agency created by Congress in 1969 to protect Tahoe's environment for failing to live up to its mission.

Jim Hildinger of South Lake Tahoe said he was inspired when the agency was created but has since been disappointed with actions he said appear driven by economics.

"I thought at last we were going to have control over some of the crazy things that were happening up here. I was wrong," Hildinger said. "Making money is not as important as saving this national treasure, this world treasure, for future generations."

The criticism drew a retort from Jim Galloway, a Washoe County commissioner on the governing board.

Galloway said TRPA has made major progress in protecting the lake's environment, often through regulations and policies that never get much public attention but have prevented many damaging changes from occurring.

"This basin is better off, far better off, today than it would have been if TRPA never existed," Galloway said.

Monday, March 5, 2007

Bad News

Last week the TRPA Board voted to allow Heavenly to clear-cut a swath of the North Bowl trees to make room for a new chair lift.

It was a close vote, and unfortunately two of the more environmentally-conscious board members were absent due to the major storm and closure of Hwy 50. Could it have gone a different way? It should have, and it very well could have.

The Board rejected Alternative 4A, which would have built a 'kinked' lift, under heavy lobbying by Heavenly's Andrew Strain and TRPA Director John Singlaub, both of whom misled the TRPA Board to believe that building the 'kinked' lift would somehow be worse environmentally than cutting down these old growth trees, because it would require building a third base station at the top of the existing North Bowl chair, in an area that is already heavily developed.

John Singlaub also lied to the TRPA Board when he claimed that the North Bowl trees weren't old-growth forest, just "big trees," which flatly contradicts TRPA's own maps and documents.

You can watch a video of John Singlaub's misleading testimony by clicking here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Vvu3LEBods

Stay tuned for further updates. . .

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Movie this Friday!

Spread the word - movie this Friday at LTCC!

Resorting to Madness: Taking Back Our Mountain Communities

When: Friday, Feb 23rd at 5:00 pm
Where: Lake Tahoe Community College Theater
$5 donation requested

This Friday, Sierra Nevada Alliance will sponsor the South Lake Tahoe premiere of a new documentary film called Resorting to Madness: Taking Back Our Mountain Communities.

This film addresses the impacts of the modern ski resort industry on mountain communities and environments. Including footage and interviews from dozens of ski areas, experts and concerned community members throughout North America, the film reveals some disturbing trends affecting mountain resort towns and offers up suggestions to protect and maintain mountain environments and communities.

Following the film will be a brief discussion about the future development plans of Heavenly Ski Resort, what the alternatives are and what the community can do to get involved. One of the filmmakers will be present to answer questions about the film.

For more information contact Sierra Nevada Alliance at 542-4546 or info@sierranevadaalliance.org

Monday, February 12, 2007

Their Fate is in Our Hands

Together we really can save the North Bowl Trees - you can help make it happen in just 30 seconds. Here's how:

The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency (TRPA) will decide the fate of the North Bowl Trees on February 28, 2007. TRPA's job is to protect the lake and the remaining old-growth trees in our area. TRPA has the power to make Heavenly build the angled lift, if enough people speak out. TRPA needs to hear from us - it's in our hands.

Here are some quick and easy things you can do to save North Bowl Trees:

1. Send an email to TRPA right now. In your email, tell TRPA you support Alternative 4A to protect the North Bowl trees. Send your email to jmcnamara@trpa.org

2. Email your friends. Send your friends a link to this blog, and encourage them to write an email too.

3. Write a letter or fill out a postcard.
Handwritten letters are great, or fill out one of the Get Kinky postcards available around town. Address your letter to the TRPA Governing Board and send it to PO Box 5310, Stateline, NV 89449. But be sure to send it soon - TRPA will make their decision on Feb. 28!

4. Attend the hearing. The TRPA will make their decision at a public meeting on Wednesday, February 28th. Meeting starts at 10 am at the TRPA offices, 128 Market Street, Stateline NV.

Want to do more? Email us for info about distributing postcards and stickers, and other ways to volunteer.

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

What is "Get Kinky?"

This is a website by and for those who want to protect the North Bowl Trees at Heavenly Resort in South Lake Tahoe. We are skiers and riders who love big powder and big trees, and Tahoe residents and visitors who want to protect the lake. We came up with the slogan "Get Kinky" to encourage Heavenly to build an angled or "kinked" lift to protect the North Bowl trees.

Read on for more info about how you can help save the North Bowl trees.



Heavenly wants to build a new chairlift through the heart of the majestic old-growth trees in North Bowl, home to some of the best tree-skiing in Tahoe and one of the few old-growth forests remaining in our area.

There is a better way. Heavenly can build an angled or "kinky" lift that would follow the path of the old North Bowl and Olympic chairs, and go around the North Bowl Trees.

This angled lift would get skiers from the bottom of North Bowl to the top of Olympic in 13 minutes, compared to the 26 minutes it now takes.

So building the angled lift would be a win-win for skiers and the environment: it would still get skiers to the top of Olympic quickly, and it would preserve the North Bowl trees.