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BMPs may become issue when selling property


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By Kathryn Reed

STATELINE – Lake Tahoe homebuyers and sellers beware because the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency is looking to crackdown on erosion control measures at private residences.

There is a good chance that a year after escrow closes BMPs will have to be completed. And when it comes time for disclosure about BMPs, sellers may be asked to pony up the money to have them completed or for the selling price to be reduced.

On July 8 a room of about 70 people, most of whom are in the real estate business, gathered to hear what the future of best management practices will be as well as to give the nine-member committee their opinions.

Rocks in front of this residence are a drip line so runoff from the roof doesn't pound the ground. Photo/LTN

Rocks in front of this residence are a drip line so runoff from the roof doesn’t pound the ground. Photo/LTN

A working group was convened earlier this year to address the BMP issue because the Regional Plan committee could not find a resolution prior to the update being adopted in December 2012. The group first met in March.

What has the real estate community up in arms is the possibility of requiring BMPs be done at the point of sale. Collectively, they said this would hurt their industry and is not the best way to achieve the main goal – which is to reduce sediment from reaching Lake Tahoe.

Even though it was pointed out in the staff report that primary roads are the overwhelming transporter of runoff, that was barely touched upon. Jason Kuchnicki with Nevada Department of Environmental Protection and Jason Burke with South Lake Tahoe brought it up, but the conversation went nowhere. (They are on the working group.) Of the five categories, single-family residences carry the least debris to the lake. In fact, those parcels along with multi-family residences, secondary roads and “land use category” don’t collectively total the amount of sediment of primary roads.

It is Clem Schute, California’s rep on the TRPA Governing Board, and Dan Siegel with the California Attorney General’s Office (both working group members) who are pushing for the point of sale BMP requirement. They are willing to delay the discussion for two years when the Regional Plan will be updated. (That document is now being looked at every four years.)

But what they want now is any residence that is sold to have its BMPs within a year. The fine per day would be $5,000 – or nearly $2 million a year. It was pointed out how this practice is equivalent to having a point of sale mandate.

Shelly Aldean, Nevada Governing Board member who is on the working group, said the fine is already part of the TRPA Compact and is not something new.

Agents for years have chosen to have sellers disclose and buyers acknowledge whether BMPs existed. Now, they say, the market is dictating that BMPs are becoming a negotiating point without TRPA intervention.

All residences were supposed to have put in BMPs by now, but the TRPA has been lax about enforcement. (However, about 60 letters are going out soon to Al Tahoe residents.) Part of the lack of enforcement has to do with staffing, and part with the evolution of science since 1987 when the first Regional Plan was adopted.

Water from the Bijou area drains from a large pipe right into Lake Tahoe. Photo/LTN file

Water from the Bijou area drains from a large pipe right into Lake Tahoe. Photo/LTN file

Plus, the passage of the total maximum daily load protocols calls for jurisdictions to reduce fine sediment in order to be in compliance with state agencies. Working on roads and larger erosion control projects is how they will achieve this.

It was stated at the meeting that even if all the residences in the basin did their BMPs, it would not add up to enough credits to satisfy the larger state goals. (Half of the residents in the basin have completed their BMPs.)

Many who spoke – including working group members – said the big picture is what should be looked at instead of going parcel by parcel. This includes putting together assessment districts like South Lake Tahoe has done with the Bijou properties. That is a multi-year project that is under way now that involves commercial and residential parcels.

But things like that take time. The Bijou process started in 2007. And when some property owners balked, the city and TRPA teamed up and threatened them with a lawsuit.

There was talk of looking at the areas in the basin that are the biggest contributors to sediment runoff and working to get those parcels into a stormwater district so it would have a greater environmental impact and likely cost less because of the economies of scale.

“The rest of the country is far ahead of us on this,” Joanne Marchetta, TRPA executive director, said.

At the Aug. 20 meeting the group is expected to finalize the TRPA document real estate agents use in regards to BMP disclosure.

In the meantime, security deposit forfeitures will be a topic for the Legal Committee to tackle. The discussion would cover the use of those funds and the possibility of targeting additional funds for BMP enforcement.

For next month’s meeting staff will also bring back a detailed document for how enforcement could be handled.

The group meets from 9am-noon (or longer as the case was Tuesday) at the TRPA offices in Stateline.

Other working group members are Karin Staggs (Nevada Tahoe Conservation District), Sara Ellis (Nevada Realtors), Shannon Eckmeyer (League to Save Lake Tahoe), and Woody Loftin (Natural Resources Conservation Services).

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Comments

Comments (9)
  1. Sharon Kerrigan says - Posted: July 9, 2014

    Thank you for your fine reporting, Kae.

  2. Buck says - Posted: July 9, 2014

    Are residential BMPs science or policy? Marchetta said policy. Show us the science.

  3. Dogula says - Posted: July 9, 2014

    Buck, you know it doesn’t matter what the science is, anyway. Once it is policy, the regulation never goes away. You must comply.

  4. Dubliner says - Posted: July 9, 2014

    The residential bmps aren’t the problem. Why focus on this any longer. Everyone knows it… Once they are installed they aren’t maintained or looked at. Making them a part of an escrow process is insane. This is not the part of the program we are behind the nation with.

  5. margaret says - Posted: July 10, 2014

    It is so typical government agency to DEMAND/REQUIRE that someone else enforce their rules. If the TRPA has a regulation/rule/policy then they need to get off their dead duffs and enforce it themselves on their own time and with their own money…this ridiculous, for the most part, regulation on private residences is TRPA’s baby, not the responsibility of the real estate community. TRPA YOU OWN THIS !!!! DO YOUR JOB YOURSELVES. This is nothing more than government gone bad…or correctly gone worse than even before.

  6. City Resident says - Posted: July 10, 2014

    “…primary roads are the overwhelming transporter of runoff.” The TRPA should fine the city and county $5000/day before they fines the poor residents of this city – unbelievable! – but they must know that they can’t bully the city and county in the same way they can homeowners. Shame on the TRPA! Go after the biggest sources of runoff first, not the ones who are most easily bullied.

  7. A.B. says - Posted: July 10, 2014

    The real problem here is the “sand” dumped on our roadways during the winter. Let’s have a candid discussion about what this is, because it is not sand. The airborne particulate created by driving over this grit, salt, and calcium chloride mixture is toxic, and it gets right into the lake.

    It’s time we had an honest discussion to BAN THE SAND!

  8. RC says - Posted: July 19, 2014

    The cost of the BMP’s is high enough. The City and County encroachment permits for paving non paved driveways are excessively high and keep many from completing the requested projects.