To View a List of All Area Plans, Community Plans, and Plan Area

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

To View a List of All Area Plans, Community Plans, and Plan Area • Meyers Area Plan, El Dorado County (2018) • Placer County Tahoe Basin Area Plan and Implementing Regulations (2017) • Tahoe Valley Area Plan, City of South Lake Tahoe (2015) • Tourist Core Area Plan, City of South Lake Tahoe (2013) • South Shore Area Plan, Douglas County (2013) • Bijou/Al Tahoe Community Plan (098) and Citywide Standards and Guidelines (Does not apply to area plans) • Incline Village Commercial Community Plan (045) and Washoe County Standards and Guidelines • Incline Village Tourist Community Plan (048) and Washoe County Standards and Guidelines • Nevada North Stateline Casino Core Community Plan (032B) and Douglas County Standards and Guidelines Document • Ponderosa Ranch Community Plan (054) and Washoe County Standards and Guidelines • Roundhill Community Plan (071) and Douglas County Standards and Guidelines Document • Stateline/Ski Run Community Plan (089B) • South Y Industrial Tract Community Plan (113) and Citywide Standards and Guidelines (Does not apply to area plans) • Airport (116) • Al Tahoe (099) • Angora Highlands (131) • Angora Ridge (130) • Baldwin Beach (128) • Bijou (093) • Bijou Meadows (101) • Bijou Pines (097) • Black Bart (107) • Bonaza (114) • Camp Richardson (127) • Cascade Properties (175) 6/2019 • Cave Rock (062) • Chateau/Country Club (043) • Chimney Rock (079) • Christmas Valley (137) • Country Club Meadow (119) • Crystal Bay (034) • Crystal Bay Condominiums (035) • Dardenelles (139) • Desolation (143) • Douglas County Sewer Improvement District (075) • East Shore (055) • Echo Lake (142) • Echo Summit (140) • Echo View (134) • Edgewood (070A) • Elk Point (069) • Emerald Bay (146) • Fairway (044) • Fallen Leaf Forest Service Tracts (144A) • Fallen Leaf North (129) • Freel Peak (121) • Gardner Mountain (112) • Genoa Peak (060) • Glenbrook (058) • Glenridge (151) • Glenwood (094) • Golden Bear (115) • Heavenly Valley California (087) • Heavenly Valley Nevada (086) • Highland Woods (104) • Incline Lake (053) • Incline Ski (052) • Incline Village #1 (040) • Incline Village #2 (039) • Incline Village #3 (041) • Incline Village #4/Ponderosa (036) • Incline Village #5 (042) 6/2019 • Incline Village Residential (046) • Kingsbury Drainage (080) • Kingsbury Heights (083) • Kingsbury Village (081) • Lake Village (073) • Lakeridge (064) • Lakeside Park (089) • Lakeview (037) • Lakeview Heights (085) • Lilly/Angora Lakes (144B) • Lincoln (063) • Logan Creek (061) • Luther Pass (141) • Marla Bay/Zephyr Heights (067) • Marlette Lake (056) • Martis Peak (019) • McKinney Lake (152) • Meeks Bay (150) • Meeks Creek (148) • Meyers Forest (123) • Meyers Residential (124) • Middle Kingsbury (078) • Mill Creek (049) • Montgomery Estates (106) • Mount Rose (030) • Mountain View (132) • Mt. Shadows (050) • Oliver Park (077) • Palisades (084) • Paradise Flat (147) • Pioneer Village (096) • Pioneer/Ski Run (092) • Pope Beach (126) • Rabe (070B) • Round Hill Residential (074) • Round Hill/Tahoe Dempsey (072) • Round Mound (068) 6/2019 • Rubicon (149) • Shakespeare Point (059) • Sierra Tract (105) • Sierra Tract Commercial (103) • Skyland (065) • South Fallen Leaf Lake (145) • Spooner Lake (057) • Stateline Point (033) • Sugar Pine Point (153) • Tahoe Island (111) • Tahoe Keys (102) • Tahoe Meadows (090) • Tahoe Paradise – Mandan (122) • Tahoe Paradise – Upper Truckee (133) • Tahoe Paradise Meadowvale (120) • Tahoe Paradise Washoan (117) • Tahoe Paradise Chiapa (135) • Tahoe Paradise Nahane (138) • Tahoe Valley Campground (109) • Tahoe Village (088) • Tahoma Commercial (155) • Tahoma Residential (154) • Trout/Cold Creek (095) • Truckee Marsh (100) • Tunnel Creek (047) • Twin Peaks (118) • Tyrolian Village (051) • Upper Kingsbury (082) • Winnemucca (108) • Wood Creek (038) • Zephyr Cove (066) To view the original Plan Area Statements maps adopted by TRPA in 1987, please contact Long Range Planning staff at 775-588-4547. These maps are referenced in some of the Plan Area Statement and can be used to compare spatial information and plan area boundaries. 6/2019 .
Recommended publications
  • HISTORY of the TOIYABE NATIONAL FOREST a Compilation
    HISTORY OF THE TOIYABE NATIONAL FOREST A Compilation Posting the Toiyabe National Forest Boundary, 1924 Table of Contents Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 3 Chronology ..................................................................................................................................... 4 Bridgeport and Carson Ranger District Centennial .................................................................... 126 Forest Histories ........................................................................................................................... 127 Toiyabe National Reserve: March 1, 1907 to Present ............................................................ 127 Toquima National Forest: April 15, 1907 – July 2, 1908 ....................................................... 128 Monitor National Forest: April 15, 1907 – July 2, 1908 ........................................................ 128 Vegas National Forest: December 12, 1907 – July 2, 1908 .................................................... 128 Mount Charleston Forest Reserve: November 5, 1906 – July 2, 1908 ................................... 128 Moapa National Forest: July 2, 1908 – 1915 .......................................................................... 128 Nevada National Forest: February 10, 1909 – August 9, 1957 .............................................. 128 Ruby Mountain Forest Reserve: March 3, 1908 – June 19, 1916 ..........................................
    [Show full text]
  • Management Direction
    LTBMU Forest Plan IV. Management Direction A . Introduction .................................................... B . Forest Goals and Predicted Future Condition ..................... 1v-1 C . Forest Objectives - Average Annual Outputs .................... 1v-11 . Forestwide Summary of Acreage Allocations by Management ............................................. E . Management Practices and Forestwide Standards and Guidelines .... F . Management Prescriptions ....................................... G . Management Area Direction ...................................... 1. Blackwood .................................................. 1v-57 2 . Desolation ................................................. 3 . East Shore Beaches .......................................... Echo Lakes .................................................. 5 . Emerald Bay ................................................. 6 . Fallen Leaf ................................................. 7 . ....................................................... 8 . Genoa Peak ................................................ IV-101 . Heavenly .................................................. 10 . Lower Truckee River ........................................ 11 . Marlette ................................................... 12 . Martis ..................................................... McKinney ................................................... 14. Meeks ...................................................... Meiss ...................................................... 16. Mt. Rose
    [Show full text]
  • Before It Was a Park
    BEFORE IT WAS A PARK Lake Tahoe Nevada State Park and its Foundations in Comstock History Nevada Division of State Parks In honor of Nevada’s 150th anniversary 1864 to 2014 By Jay Howard, LTNSP 2014, revised 2017 A State Made by Mining Ron James wrote in his Comstock history novel The Roar and the Silence, “It was the longest telegraph ever sent, but Nevadan’s did not intend to do things in a small way. With the paperwork in order, Lincoln signed Nevada into statehood on October 31st 1864, just a few days before the November presidential election. Nevada sent back a thank-you in the form of three electoral votes for the president’s reelection.” Nevadan’s were proud of their pro-Union stance during the Civil War. Needed by the United States both politically and economically, the state of Nevada was said to have been ‘Battle Born’. Though we understand this to refer to the battles that had been raging in the east since 1861, Nevada was itself a relatively peaceful territory, other than the occasional skirmishes with Native Americans, and the more serious Pyramid Lake War of 1860. Nevadan’s never saw any fighting with Confederate forces, but certainly had their share of fistfights between Unionists and Copperheads. The latter usually losing the argument. During one incident, the Stars and Bars of the Confederacy was raised over a building in Virginia City, which led to a serious altercation between townspeople. Newspapers later reported that Unionists emerged bloody, but victorious. Early in the Civil War there was some concern that Nevada could be taken by the Confederacy, but these fears were never realized.
    [Show full text]
  • US Forest Service
    Regional Fact Sheet: Public Lands Operational Update Overview: As wildfire conditions around Northern California and Northern Nevada remain dangerously high, many public lands around the Tahoe-Truckee region are closed. Please see below for area closures and operational modifications. Elevated Fire Restrictions are in effect in all areas of the Tahoe Basin ● Elevated Fire Season Restrictions prohibit the burning of wood and charcoal on public or private property including residential properties, vacation/short-term rentals, campgrounds, resorts and other recreational areas throughout the Lake Tahoe/Truckee Region until the end of November or until rescinded, including all at California State Parks and USFS sites across the Tahoe Basin. ● Watch for and heed Red Flag fire warnings. When a Red Flag is in effect, all sources of outdoor open flame, including gas/propane/pellet grills and smokers on all private and public lands are banned throughout the Lake Tahoe/Truckee Region. ● Additionally, on all USFS lands all ignition sources are prohibited, including anything with a flame, until further notice. These orders are in place to protect everyone during the current state of wildfire activity and limited fire response resources and will remain in place until further notice. California State Parks: Due to the current state wildfire crisis, the closure of neighboring USFS lands, and COVID-19 and its impacts on Parks personnel to support basic operations, the following are in place: ● Campfires and charcoal BBQs are banned on all park lands. ● Does not currently allow walk-ins at any campgrounds for the remainder of the season and will be closing all remaining campgrounds on October 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Development and Documentation of Spatial Data Bases for the Lake Tahoe Basin, California and Nevada
    Development and Documentation of Spatial Data Bases for the Lake Tahoe Basin, California and Nevada UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Water-Resources Investigations Report 93-4182 Prepared in cooperation with the TAHOE REGIONAL PLANNING AGENCY U.S. GEOLCGICAL SURVEY RE:1>TON, VA. FEB 2 2 1994 sR LIBRARY - • • l'!;-•..";1":: • • - • • • • , • t • • :•• • .17 Development and Documentation of Spatial Data Bases for the Lake Tahoe Basin, California and Nevada By Kenn D. Cartier, Lorri A. Peltz, and J. LaRue Smith U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Water-Resources Investigations Report 93-4182 Prepared in cooperation with the TAHOE REGIONAL PLANNING AGENCY Carson City, Nevada 1994 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR BRUCE BABBITT, Secretary U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY ROBERT M. HIRSCH, Acting Director Any use of trade names in this publication is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government. For additional information Copies of this report can be write to: purchased from: U.S. Geological Survey District Chief Earth Science Information Center U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Reports Section 333 West Nye Lane, Room 203 Box 25286, MS 517 Carson City, NV 89706-0866 Denver Federal Center Denver, CO 80225-0046 CONTENTS Page Abstract 1 Introduction 1 Purpose and Scope 4 General Description of Lake Tahoe Basin 4 Previous Investigations 4 Description of Geographic Information Systems and Computer Equipment 4 Acknowledgments 5 Sources of Geographic Information 5 Sources of Thematic Data 5 Geologic Maps 5 Soil Maps 5 Timber-Type Maps 7
    [Show full text]
  • Supplemental Bibliography Paper 1
    The mid-Cretaceous Peninsular Ranges orogeny: a new slant on Cordilleran tectonics? I: Mexico to Nevada HILDEBRAND, Robert S.,* 1401 N. Camino de Juan, Tucson, AZ 85745 USA WHALEN, Joseph B., Geological Survey of Canada, 601 Booth Street, Ottawa, ON K1A 0E8, Canada Supplemental File 1 Schmidt, K.L., and Paterson, S.R. 2002. A doubly vergent fan structure in the Peninsular Ranges batholith: Transpression or local complex flow around a continental margin buttress? Tectonics, 21: 1050, http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1029/2001TC001353. Schmidt, K.L., Wetmore, P.H., Alsleben, H., and Paterson, S.R. 2014. Mesozoic tectonic evolution of the southern Peninsular Ranges batholith, Baja California, Mexico: Long-lived history of a collisional segment in the Mesozoic Cordilleran arc. In Peninsular Ranges Batholith, Baja California and Southern California. Edited by D.M. Morton, and F.K. Miller, Geological Society of America Memoir 211, 645–668, doi.org/10.1130/2014.1211. Supplemental File 2 Dickinson, W.R. 2008. Accretionary Mesozoic–Cenozoic expansion of the Cordilleran continental margin in California and Oregon. Geosphere, 4: 329–353. doi:10.1130/GES00105.1. Hildebrand, R.S. 2013. Mesozoic Assembly of the North American Cordillera: Geological Society of America Special Paper 495, 169 p.. doi:10.1130/2013.2495. Supplemental File 3 Armin, R.A., John, D.A. 1983. Geologic map of the Freel Peak 15-minute Quadrangle, California and Nevada, U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map I-1424. Armin, R.A., John, D.A., Moore, W.J. 1984. Geologic map of the Markleeville 15-minute Quadrangle, Alpine County, California.
    [Show full text]
  • Tahoe's Seven Summits
    Birds return to Lake Tahoe, page 4 Summer 2014 Drought offers TAHOE’S SEVEN SUMMITS good news, bad By Jeff Cowen news for Lake Tahoe In Depth By Jim Sloan The Lake may be this Region’s Tahoe In Depth most famous geographic feature, but it is Tahoe’s peaks that define our From the shoreline, a long-term landscapes and, at times, the course or severe drought seems to put of our lives. Daily, we glimpse them Lake Tahoe in dire straits. The water towering over our tedium, indelible recedes, streams dry up and the reminders of nature’s greatness and our shoreline beaches expand to expose own impermanence. Succumbing to a bathtub ring along the 72-mile their power, we climb them. shoreline. Some climbers are peak collectors, But from the water, things don’t “bagging” the major summits one by always look so bad. During a one. Others climb on a lark, impulsively drought, many of the pollutants joining friends and unprepared for the that affect Lake Tahoe’s clarity can’t Photo © Steve Dunleavy experience ahead. Regardless of our Pyramid Peak rises above the fog-choked Tahoe Basin. find their way to the Lake. Droughts paths, once we reach their summits, we slow down the rate of urban runoff, feel at once tiny and expansive, earth and rodents. Trees become shorter and neighborhoods. reducing erosion and the flow of fine and time stretching in all directions wider, until they disappear entirely. Our Climbers of even our most benign sediment and other water-clouding below us, the experience undeniably bodies change too.
    [Show full text]
  • South Tahoe Area Trail Map (From Kingsbury Grade to Highway 89) VAN SICKLE C Si Kl BI-STATE PARK N E Tahoe Rim Trail a Tra V Il to Kingsbury Grade & Stagecoach Lodge
    South Tahoe Area Trail Map (From Kingsbury Grade to Highway 89) VAN SICKLE c Si kl BI-STATE PARK n e Tahoe Rim Trail a Tra V il To Kingsbury Grade & Stagecoach Lodge HGHWAY 50 5.8 L a k e T a h o e elev. 6,225’ East Peak SKI RUN BLVD 9,590’ Heavenly CA Lodge Future 6,500’ Heavenly Mountain Resort Bike 8.5 Park l i a AL TAHOE BLVD r T e * T n i a l r Monument Peak h e 10,060’ o HGHWAY 89 HGHWAY 50 w e o Monument Pass P R i m 8,900’ 3.1 T r a i l 2.5 Co il ld Tra Cr e ek o ad High Meadow R dow 7,800’ a l e i High M a r PIONEER TRAIL1.6 T d e ra G d a o S r t il a a 1.8 r 3.83 R il C La ke Tr a HGHWAY 50 e d a r 1.9 T r Star Lake a C i elev. 9,100’ or l Sidewinder ra l Trail T Trimmer Peak ail r r T a m .9 9,910’ i i l R C ONEIDAS ST o e n h o n Ta e Freel Pass MAP LEGEND: F o c 9,700’ u t n o Multi-Use Trail t r NORTH a Trai in l1.7 P l 5.1 Freel Peak ace Dirt Road Road 10,880’ Fountain Place 7,800’ Narrow Paved Road Neighborhood Street Neighborhood Trails S to Meyers a 3.8 x o Primary Street n Arm stro C n g Trai Creek r l e e k 200’ Interval Contour ( M r .
    [Show full text]
  • Chronology of Emplacement of Mesozoic Batholithic Complexes in California and Western Nevada by J
    Chronology of Emplacement of Mesozoic Batholithic Complexes In California and Western Nevada By J. F. EVERNDEN and R. W. KISTLER GEOLOGICAL SURVEY PROFESSIONAL PAPER 623 Prepared in cooperation with the University of California (Berkeley) Department of Geological Sciences UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE, WASHINGTON : 1970 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR WALTER J. HICKEL, Secretary GEOLOGICAL SURVEY William T. Pecora, Director Library of Con;gress CSJtalog-card No. 7s-.60.38'60 For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D.C. 20402 - Price $1.25 (paper cover) CONTENTS Page Abstract-------------------------------~---------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 Introduction--------------------------------------------------------------------------------~----------------- 1 Analyt:cal problems ____________________ -._______________________________________________________________________ 2 Analytical procedures______________________________________________________________________________________ 2 Precision and accuracy ___________________ -.- __ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 Potassium determinations_______________________________________________________________________________ · 2 Argon determinations--------~------------------~------------------------------------------------------ 5 Chemical and crystallographic effects on potassium-argon ages----------.-----------------------------------------
    [Show full text]
  • Sierra Nevada Ecoregional Plan
    SIERRA NEVADA ECOREGIONAL PLAN December 1999 Photo Courtesy Charles Webber Sierra Nevada Ecoregional Plan 2 Sierra Nevada Ecoregional Plan Sierra Nevada Ecoregional Plan: Craig Mayer Pam Weiant Larry Serpa Christine Tam Robin Cox Jim Gaither 201 Mission Street, 4th Floor San Francisco, CA 94105 (415) 777-0487 3 Sierra Nevada Ecoregional Plan 4 Sierra Nevada Ecoregional Plan TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Ecoregional Plan A. Executive Summary ……………………………………………….. 7 B. Purpose ……………………………………………………… 9 C. Description of Ecoregion ……………………………………… 9 D. Conservation Issues ……………………………………………… 11 E. Data Sources and Management ……………………………… 11 F. Conservation Targets ……………………………………… 12 G. Conservation Goals ……………………………………………… 12 H. Portfolio Assembly ……………………………………………… 14 I. Portfolio Results ……………………………………………… 15 J. Evaluation of Conservation Lands ………………………………… 25 K. Functional Aggregations …………….……………………………… 25 L. Selecting Action Areas ……………………………………………… 26 2. Analysis and Results by Ecological Group A. Aquatic Systems ……………………………………………… 35 B. Riparian ……………………………………………………… 49 C. Foothill Woodlands ……………………………………………… 61 D. Chaparral ……………………………………………………… 67 E. Montane and Subalpine Coniferous Forests ……………………… 75 F. Interior Wetlands Meadow, and Aspen ……………………… 81 G. Alpine ……………………………………………………… 95 H. Desert Scrub and Woodland ……………………………………… 101 I. Isolated Rare Plants ……………………………………………… 107 J. Common and Widespread Communities ……………………… 111 3. References and Contacts ……………………………………………. 115 4. Appendices ……………………………………………………… 127 Appendix I. Conservation
    [Show full text]
  • Draft Revised Land and Resource Management Plan
    United States Department of Agriculture Draft Revised Forest Land and Resource Management Plan Service Pacific Southwest Volume III – Region DEIS and Draft Plan Appendices R5-MB-241C June 2012 Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit Cover photo: Eagle Falls Trail located on National Forest System lands on Lake Tahoe’s southwest shore. The trailhead and parking lot kiosk, across US Highway 89 from the Emerald Bay overlook, offer information about hiking into Desolation Wilderness, looking westward toward Eagle Lake, a popular short, but steep, hike (less than half an hour). Credit – all photos, graphs and maps: U.S. Forest Service staff, Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit may be duplicated for public use (not for profit) The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, and where applicable, sex, marital status, familial status, parental status, religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs, reprisal, or because all or part of an individual's income is derived from any public assistance program. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA's TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD). To file a complaint of discrimination, write to USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410, or call (800) 795-3272 (voice) or (202) 720- 6382 (TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
    [Show full text]
  • David A. John1, Richard A. Araijn1, Donald Plouff1, Maurice A. Chaffar, Douglas F. Scott2, Francis E. Federspiel2, Thomas J. Peters2, Eric E
    DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR TO ACCOMPANY MAP MF-1322-C UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY MINERAL RESOURCE POTENTIAL OF THE FREEL AND DARDANELLES ROADLESS AREAS, ALPINE AND EL DORADO COUNTIES, CALIFORNIA SUMMARY REPORT By David A. John1, Richard A. Araijn1, Donald Plouff1, Maurice A. Chaffar, Douglas F. Scott2, Francis E. Federspiel2, Thomas J. Peters2, Eric E. Gather2, and Harry W. CampbeU2 STUDIES RELATED TO WILDERNESS Under the provisions of the Wilderness Act (Public Law 88-577, September 3, 1964) and related acts the U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Bureau of Mines have been conducting mineral surveys of wilderness and primitive areas. Areas officially designated as "wilderness," "wild," or "canoe" when the act was passed were incorporated into the National Wilderness Preservation System, and some of them are presently being studied. The act provided that areas under consideration for wilderness designation should be studied for suitability for incorporation into the Wilderness System. The mineral surveys constitute one aspect of the suitability studies. The act directs that the results of such surveys are to be made available to the public and be submitted to the President and the Congress. This report discusses the results of a mineral survey of the Freel (5- 271) and Dardanelles (4-982 and 5-982) Roadless Areas, El Dorado and Toiyabe National Forests, Alpine and El Dorado Counties, California. These areas were classified as further planning areas during the Second Roadless Area Review and Evaluation (RARE n) by the U.S. Forest Service, January 1979. SUMMARY The Dardanelles Roadless Area (fig. 1) has potential for tungsten, zinc, silver, and copper resources.
    [Show full text]