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Show A-12 Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, December 14-17, 2019 The Park Record A TASTE OF LUXURY FOR OUR LOCALS Experience Destination Dining in the Mountains Utah’s newest luxury resort invites you to experience a special taste of YUTA. Enjoy a 4-course meal prepared by our James Beard Award-winning Chef Galen Zamarra. 4 Courses for $45 435.571.0349 - aubergeresorts.com/bluesky - @yutarestaurant - @blueskyutah Group aims to restore Lake Tahoe forest and watershed Fire mitigation is key part of plan to help 60,000 acres JUSTIN SCACCO Sierra Sun The Lake Tahoe West Restoration Partnership announced a major milestone last week in regard to its effort to restore forest and watershed health across 60,000 acres of federal, state, local and private lands on the West Shore of the Tahoe Basin. After roughly two years of work, the partnership has released its Landscape Restoration Strategy, which will substantially increase the pace and scale of restoration efforts, including forest thinning, prescribed fires, and meadow, aspen and stream restoration. The restoration strategy also aims to better protect the homes and communities along the West Shore between Tahoe City and Emerald Bay, which covers more than one-third of the Tahoe Basin. “Decades of fire suppression have left forests with an accumulation of fuels that must be made a priority,” said North Tahoe Fire Chief Mike Schwartz, in a news release. “Only a strategy of this caliber can address restoring forests, streams, and wildlife habitat at the pace and scale necessary to be effective. Landscape level restoration protects communities from wildfire and creates resilient forests.” The 60,000 acres to be addressed mark a major step toward creating healthier and more resilient forests along the West Shore, according to Project Manager for the Lake Tahoe West Restoration Partnership Sarah Di Vittorio, and Reservations required. Please contact martin.fairley@aubergeresorts.com to make arrangements for this limited offer. Tax and gratuity not included. will be a significant increase in scale compared to past and current management projects. “It really covers a huge landscape,” said Di Vittorio. “Agencies in the past have been focused more on a couple hundred acres here, a couple thousand acres there, and this is 60,000 acres and it’s collaborative. It’s across land ownerships, and so the approach is really designed to do restoration work and reduce fuels on a larger scale.” While conventional forest management approaches are typically led by a single agency, the Lake Tahoe West Restoration Partnership is a collaborative effort led by the Forest Service Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit, California Tahoe Conservancy, California State Parks, Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, Tahoe Fire and Fuels Team, and National Forest Foundation. From the outset, the partnership targeted Tahoe’s West Shore, said Di Vittorio, because “there’s a lot of population that lives on that side of the lake, and so, everyone recognized that there’s a big need to address those forests in particular. And then also there’s a lot of forest in that part of the lake that land management agencies knew needed attention from the beginning.” Forests in the area are overly dense and uniform, according to the restoration strategy, and are susceptible to high severity fire, especially in lower elevations and canyons. Trees and plants along the West Shore are also said to be dense near the ground, creating ladder fuels that could carry flames to tree tops. Along with forest management, the project is also looking to restore streams, of which 80% reportedly have barriers that may block fish from moving upstream. Work to begin in 2020 Implementation of the project is estimated to begin in 2022, with an estimated annual cost of $12 million over the next decade. Much of that funding, according to Di Vittorio, will be secured through state and federal sources. During the next two years, residents and visitors can expect to see a similar amount of work done in the area’s forests compared to previous years, before restoration efforts ramp up along the West Shore. “It’s hard to put an exact number on (the increase of work to be done along the West Shore),” said Di Vittorio. “But I’d say it’s pretty substantial, probably a doubling of forest restoration work at least.” The Landscape Restoration Strategy was developed to complement ongoing efforts to reduce fire hazards near West Shore communities, according to the Lake Tahoe West Restoration Project, and to provide a science-based framework to guide continued forest and watershed restoration during the next two decades. The strategy also calls for continued investment in programs like increasing the resistance of homes to ignition by embers, establishment of defensible space around homes and neighborhoods, and community wildfire protection planning that protects communities from high severity fire. “This Strategy defines a vision and a path forward,” said Jeff Marsolais, forest supervisor for the Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit, in a news release. “By inviting key partners and stakeholders to the table, we’ve been able to consider a strategy beyond just the National Forest System on the West Shore.” Blow Away The Storm With A Honda Honda Single-Stage Snow Blowers HS720AA Clearing Maximum Pounds Width Throw Per Minute 20" 33' 1800 $ 649 •Large20"Wide •HondaGC1904Cycle •HondaGC1904Cycle •Large20”Wide OverheadCamEngine ClearingWidth,12"High OverheadCamEngine ClearingWidth,12”High •Movesupto1800lbs •Operator-FriendlyControlswith •Movesupto1800lbs •Operator-FriendlyControls LargeOn/OffSwitch perminute†(max)upto33feet! 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