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Opinion: Tackling Tahoe’s transportation troubles


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By Joanne Marchetta

The rural mountain lifestyle we all enjoy at Lake Tahoe is not isolated from the major urban areas nearby. On a typical holiday weekend, the Tahoe basin turns into a recreation thoroughfare as tens of thousands of day and overnight visitors who sustain our local economy drive up from the San Francisco Bay Area, Sacramento and Reno.

During peak times of visitation, this influx of cars and people causes traffic congestion on our limited roadways as residents, commuters, and visitors all struggle to get into, out of, and around communities, and as vehicles gather and park at major recreation attractions.

Joanne Marchetta

Tahoe is taking a systemswide approach to better manage these transportation challenges.

Public and private partners are working together to enhance the basin’s transit services, making them more frequent and more reliable, to improve the region’s network of bike and pedestrian trails, and to upgrade roadways. Private and nonprofit partners are also stepping up by helping fund projects, running shuttles, bringing new bike share programs into communities, and partnering with smartphone applications that can help people plan trips to, from, and around Tahoe.

But Lake Tahoe’s transportation challenges will be difficult to address. Even today, a shortage of bus drivers is preventing more frequent bus service this winter. There is no one silver bullet, no one entity that can solve all the difficulties. Success will not come overnight. We need to form new public-private partnerships, coordinate better, and work together on these issues as a region.

This December, with help from the Federal Highway Administration, the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency and nearly 60 public and private partners met for an all-day workshop on travel management. The focus was on emerging technologies and best practices we can consider using at Tahoe to better manage traffic congestion and parking problems not only to improve residents’ quality of life and visitors’ quality of experience, but also to reduce the impact that transportation has on the environment.

Partners at the workshop included local governments, state highway departments, inter-regional transportation agencies, nonprofit groups, ski resorts, lodging associations, chambers of commerce, visitor’s authorities, and elected officials. With this broad array of partners and stakeholders in one room, we learned about the technologies and techniques that other tourism communities are using to address transportation issues. We also talked about what we are already doing, what is working and what is not working, and areas where we can work together to grow our initiatives for broader reach and impact.

Our transportation challenges will not solve themselves. Lake Tahoe is in the middle of the rapidly-growing Northern California megaregion, a transportation planning area that includes the Bay Area, Sacramento, Stockton, Truckee, and Reno. As these nearby metropolitan areas continue to grow, we can expect more and more people will be traveling to Tahoe to recreate.

Fortunately, many new tools are available to us today. Today, nearly everyone has a smartphone. That means they have access to online applications that can provide real-time travel and parking information, help them plan trips to avoid congestion, and book new ride-sharing services that make it easier than ever to carpool.

With the right partnerships and a consistent approach throughout the Tahoe region, people could use these new technologies to learn more about our local transit services, bike share programs, and bike and pedestrian trails to avoid driving altogether, not only to and from Tahoe, but during their stay here.

Through partnership and collaboration, progress is being made all around Lake Tahoe. The 2012 Regional Plan, with its unprecedented public-private partnership for community revitalization and environmental restoration, is delivering a renaissance of projects both big and small that are revitalizing communities, reducing blight, and improving the environment.

More than 50 public, private, and nonprofit partners have made the Lake Tahoe Environmental Improvement Program one of the nation’s most ambitious and successful conservation and restoration initiatives. Partners are continuing to implement projects each year that restore the lake’s famous water clarity, clean up storm water pollution, fight aquatic invasive species, restore meadows and wetlands, improve forest health and reduce wildfire risk, and enhance the public recreation opportunities that drive Lake Tahoe’s $5 billion annual economy.

Lake Tahoe has clearly shown the power of collaboration and public-private partnerships. It’s time to focus that power on coming together to solve the region’s transportation challenges.

I know we can take our partnership and collaboration to the next level and work together on transportation issues to reduce the traffic congestion in our communities during times of peak visitation, better manage our roadways and parking areas, and make people more aware of alternatives to get to, from, and around Lake Tahoe. Please join us in this work to make Lake Tahoe a healthier, more enjoyable place for all of us, and for future generations to come.

Joanne Marchetta is executive director of the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency.

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  1. Time for a reality check says - Posted: December 25, 2017

    Merry Christmas: Yes Virginia there is a Santa Claus.
    Sadly, with that said: Planning to make yet more plans with no real implementation is NOT A SOLUTION!

    We do a lot of double speak when it comes to calling Tahoe “THE RURAL MOUNTAIN LIFESTYLE” especially when our TRPA transportation group has become the Tahoe Metropolitan Planning Organization to obtain/comply with urban type transportation grants. We cannot have it both ways yet we do our best to optimize funding in both categories.

    The realty check of having less than 60,000 full time residents with millions of visitors and cars during peak time(and many throughout the year) doesn’t exactly lend itself to good funding solutions.

    The locals should not pay for free transit as recommended regularly. Increasing sales taxes affect the already strained local population of workers trying to eek out a living and trying to find affordable housing which goes hand in hand with transit issues.

    YES we need REAL SOLUTIONS for parking issues and transit (and affordable housing) but we also need to be mindful that we have a very fixed infrastructure that limits our ability to fix the gridlock at ski resort areas, freeway on/off ramps and major arteries into the basin that cannot be expanded. Summer time adds boats/ boat trailers as well as people equally creating parking and gridlock issues. Evacuation because of gridlock a nightmare in the making.

    CAPACITY is a real issue not to be ignored! We are loving Lake Tahoe to death as a resort destination with no near-term solutions to save the environment.

    Lake Clarity Challenges that result in no real change in clarity and millions of dollars spent on studying causes and implementing Best Management Practices that are non-enforceable or have actually been proven to work have provided no relief to the Lake.

    There are lots of positive programs to clean up storm water pollution, fight aquatic invasive species, restore meadows and wetlands, improve forest health and reduce wildfire risk, and enhance the public recreation opportunities but no real enforcement basin-wide that applies equally to all. Paying mitigation and violation fees do not restore the tree that was cut down for improving a home-owners view, putting a private jetty in the lake doesn’t restore the disturbance and scenic violation it caused, additional illegal height on a multi-million dollar home still results in a scenic issue, illegal grading is still disturbance, extending permits without demolishing blight; There has been an extraordinary amount of recent news about wildland fire but we are still approving development in high fire zones….

    SO WHAT CAN WE DO? Actual code enforcement and associated funding a start; Near-term implementation not plans for 60 years as a solution for nearshore and overall lake clarity; Ski resorts actually building and housing and transporting their employees especially now that we have summer activities at the resorts for year round entertainment; Fining the bicycle community for not using the multi-millions of dollar bike trails and street routes; Insuring Google maps doesn’t send people to dead-end neighborhoods; Enforcing vacation rental parking problems, Drought and high lake level issues need to equally be addressed instead of coming up with extending buoy lines to accommodate the few….

    Lake Tahoe is and always will be a destination and is an Outstanding National Water Resource and should be treated as such. The environmental improvements have taken a backseat to tourism. This must be remedied.

    Economic stability which only results from larger resorts, luxury second homes, ski resort expansions, etc. that pad the local jurisdiction coffers and developers is not the balance needed for all to survive here or resolve the environmental, parking/transportation and affordable housing issues we have seen in the news from many agencies and non-profits.

    Time for a Reality Check for real on-the-ground solutions to Lake Tahoe’s issues and the few realizing the benefits of Lake Tahoe’s $5 billion annual economy.