Friday, February 29, 2008

News: Historic Tahoe Pine needle agreement reached

Breaking news: Historic agreement reached on the pine needle removal controversy in the Lake Tahoe Basin, Everyone wins! You can clean them up once a year! from between 5 and 30 feet from your home only once in early spring on the second Tuesday of the third week...

"This was the last sticking point in the letter; we're glad we got past it,"


After a historic series of meetings between
The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency and seven Lake Tahoe Basin fire chiefs, way too much taxpayer funded Coffee and Danish, the question of Pine needles laying on the ground and the crime of picking them up has been addressed and answered.

Agreement reached on pine needle removal at Tahoe

The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency and the Lake Tahoe Basin fire chiefs have reached agreement on whether pine needles can be used for erosion control - the final point of a letter sent from the chiefs to the agency regarding defensible space.

The letter included nine points where the TRPA could amend its best management practices to better fit with defensible space.

It was generated by the seven basin fire chiefs for the Bi-State Blue Ribbon Commission after the Angora fire last July.

The TRPA has already agreed to eight of the September 2007 letter's points and have finally reached agreement on the letter's No. 4 point, which is concerned with ground coverage.

The sticking point of coverage centered around pine needles.

The needles offer a valuable erosion-control tool in the fall by protecting soil from runoff. Conversely, dry needles present a fire hazard.

The TRPA and basin chiefs have agreed on an alternative which both say is fire-safe and addresses erosion control.

"Basically the new TRPA best management practice will be to have residents remove pine needles once in the spring. This will get that dead vegetation up off of the ground for fire season," said Martin Goldberg, a forestry supervisor with the Lake Valley Fire Protection District in South Lake Tahoe. He said the new practice is applicable to the 5 to 30 foot area around a home.

TRPA spokesman Dennis Oliver said the final point is expected to be approved at the next Bi-State Commission meeting on March 6.

Goldberg is a member of the defensible space and best management practices working group. The group was charged with deciding what to do about the coverage point of the nine-point letter.

"This was the last sticking point in the letter; we're glad we got past it," Oliver said.

Oliver said most of the letter's points required only minor adjustments from TRPA's best management practices. TRPA approved eight of the points last October.

"Most of the points were only minor clarifications so people would not be confused about possibly violating our BMP's," he said

Source: nevadaappeal.com

2 comments:

  1. You can clean them up once a year! from between 5 and 30 feet from your home only once in early spring on the second Tuesday of the third week... and only in a blue moon... Are they really that stupid in Tahoe ?

    ReplyDelete
  2. This is what the residents of the Tahoe Basin should do..gather all the pine needles and spread them on the roofs of all the homes in the basin. This won't stop a fire but it's just as stupid as the TRPAs pine needle plan.

    FUBAR

    ReplyDelete

CAL FIRE NEWS LOVES COMMENTS...
- Due to rampant abuse, we are no longer posting anonymous comments. Please use your real OpenID, Google, Yahoo, AIM, Twitter, Flickr name.


Twitter Buttons

****REMINDER**** Every fire has the ability to be catastrophic. The wildland fire management environment has profoundly changed. Growing numbers of communities, across the nation, are experiencing longer fire seasons; more frequent, bigger, and more severe, fires are a real threat. Be careful with all campfires and equipment.

"I am a firm believer in the people. If given the truth, they can be depended upon to meet any national crisis. The great point is to bring them the real facts, and beer." --Abraham Lincoln

View blog top tags
---------------------
CLICK HERE TO GO BACK TO TOP OF CALIFORNIA FIRE NEWS HOME PAGE

Subscribe via email to California Fire News - Keep track of Cal Fire News

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner