Alterra Mountain Company is “weighing its options” for the Palisades Tahoe, CA development following last month’s setback.
Four weeks ago Sierra Watch, a conservation advocacy group, won a legal battle against Alterra Mountain Company and its plans to extensively develop the area surrounding Squaw Valley, California. Three judges ruled that Alterra will not be able to continue its expansion plans for Squaw Valley because of the impacts the project would have on the area’s fire danger, noise, and traffic. The ruling reverses a 2018 trial court finding, initially allowing Alterra to continue its plans to remake the area with a series of high-rise condo hotels, a 90,000 square-foot indoor waterpark, and a rollercoaster.
In a statement, Palisades Tahoe President & COO Dee Byrne saidย โwe are disappointed in the decision and do not agree, but we will respect the process.”
โWe are committed to carrying out a responsible development in the valley, one that brings higher paying jobs, increased tax revenue, more affordable housing, and millions in future investment in support of conservation and transit to Olympic Valley and the region. We are weighing our options for how best to move forward.โ
– Dee Byrne
As Sierra Watchโs Executive Director Tom Mooers sees it, Alterra has three options, reports The Sierra Sun: appeal the courtโs decision; draft a new Environmental Impact Report for the same project and redo the public comment process; or collaborate with other key stakeholders in the region to devise a new plan altogether.
โHopefully, we can get to a collaborative process where we start with the values that any new development needs to respect, whether itโs the clarity of Lake Tahoe or something as basic as how bright the stars are in the Sierra sky. If we do that, we can end up with a development that respects this place and also the people who live here. We can end up with a development that includes workforce housing instead of just catering to jet-setting tourists.โ
– Tom Mooers
For now, though, conservationists are celebrating their victory and re-committing themselves to what, so far, has been a ten-year effort.
โThis is great news for Tahoe and everyone who has stood with us to defend our mountain values,โ Tom Mooers said in a press release, the Executive Director of the Sierra Watch. โBut our goal was never to win a lawsuit. Our goal has always been to protect our Sierra resources for future generations.โ
If the company wants to, Alterra could seek a rehearing for the case and could appeal to the California Supreme Court. A full press release shared by the Sierra Watch outlines the lawsuit and its outcome below.
PRESS RELEASE:
Sacramento, CA, 08/24/21 โ In a sweeping victory for Tahoe conservationists, Californiaโs Third District Court of Appeals sided with Sierra Watch and dealt a staggering blow to development plans for Squaw Valley.
โTodayโs decision marks a major milestone in the multi-generational commitment to conservation in the Sierra Nevada,โ says Tom Mooers, Executive Director of the plaintiff group, Sierra Watch.ย โAnd itโs a great example of how we can work together to protect the places we love.โ
A panel of three Justices based their decision on the projectโs impacts on Lake Tahoe, fire danger, noise, and traffic. The ruling reverses a 2018 trial court finding and, essentially, sends the erstwhile developer, Alterra Mountain Company, back to the drawing board.
Itโs a major victory for conservationists in their ten-year struggle to stop massive development from transforming Tahoe. Alterra had sought to remake the region with a series of high-rise condo hotels, a 90,000 square-foot indoor waterparkโas wide as a Walmart and nearly three times as tall, and a rollercoaster.
The project, as proposed in 2015, would have taken 25 years to construct and added thousands of car trips to Tahoeโs crowded roads.
โAlterra was hell-bent on bringing Vegas-style excess to the mountains of Tahoe,โ says Mooers of Sierra Watch. โIt was a direct threat to everything we love about the Sierra.โ
The battle began when KSL Capital Partners purchased Squaw Valley in 2010, citing the โgreat growth potentialโ of its new real estate asset. In 2015, the private equity firm made its plans public, asking Placer County to entitle development of a size, scale, and scope the region has never seen.
The conservation non-profit Sierra Watch responded by building a grassroots movement to turn back the project and Keep Squaw True. Thousands of volunteers got involved.ย Hundreds spoke up at public hearings.
In November of 2016, in spite of overwhelming opposition, the Placer County Board of Supervisors voted to approve the project by a 4-1 voteโwith the only โnoโ vote coming from the Supervisor who represented Tahoe and Squaw Valley.
A month later, Sierra Watch filed its initial legal challenges, pointing out that Placer Countyโs approvals violated state law. Today, the court agreed.
The California Environmental Quality Act, better known as CEQA, requires Placer County to research and write an Environmental Impact Report (EIR) to fully assess and disclose the negative impacts the new development would have on Squaw Valley and the Tahoe Sierra, and to lessen those impacts to the extent feasible.
The court, however, ruled that Placer Countyโs review was โinadequateโ, taking issue with the Countyโs disclosure and mitigation of the impacts on Lake Tahoe, fire danger, noise, and traffic.
California maintains a longstanding commitment to maintaining the clarity of Tahoeโs famously blue waters.ย CEQA even expressly designates the Tahoe Basin as an area of โStatewide, Regional, or Areawide Significance.โย But, Sierra Watch argued, the Countyโs environmental review downplayed the impacts on the lakeโespecially how traffic from the new development would have added the pollutants that are steadily robbing the lake of its clarity.
The court agreed, ruling that: โThe final EIR still never discussed the importance of Lake Tahoe or its current condition.โ
The threat of catastrophic wildfire hangs over every mountain community in the Sierra Nevada. Even today, smoke clouds the skies over Squaw Valley, and one of the routes out of the Tahoe Basin, Highway 50, is closed due to the Caldor fire.
Yet Alterraโs development is proposed for a โvery high fire hazard severity zoneโ with only one way out. If the project were built, it would take an estimated 10 hours and 40 minutes just to travel three miles out of the valleyโand onto Highway 89, already at gridlock on crowded summer days. The court found that even this drastic figure was a substantial underestimation of evacuation times.
In oral arguments in July, Alterraโs lawyers acknowledged the danger, claiming residents and visitors could just โshelter in placeโ and that the EIR had adequately assessed the issue of evacuation.
The court, however, found otherwise, ruling that โ(T)he EIRโs misleading estimation of evacuation times is still thatโa misleading estimation of evacuation times that prevented informed decisionmaking. We find the EIR inadequate in this respect as a result.โ
The court also found fault with the environmental review of noise impacts and traffic mitigation.
Sierra Watch also challenged Placer Countyโs approval under Californiaโs good governance law, the Brown Act.ย And, in a parallel decision, the court sided, once again, with Sierra Watch.
The Brown Act requires a governing body to โpost an agenda containing a brief general description of each item of business to be transacted or discussed at the meetingโ and, also, that key documents relevant to important decisions be made โavailable for public inspection.โ
In the case of its Squaw Valley development and its impact on Lake Tahoe, Sierra Watch argued, Placer County officials did neither. Instead, the County negotiated, in secret, a last-minute deal with developers.
That deal was not part of any agenda. Nor was it made โavailable for public inspectionโ. The County argued that it did make the last-minute documents available to the publicโby putting a memo in a filing cabinet the night before the hearing in a locked office building.
โThe question for us, then,โ writes the court in a separate ruling, โis whether the memorandum was โavailable for public inspection . . . at [that] time.โ It was not. No document at the County clerkโs office, after all, was โavailable for public inspection at 5:40 p.m. on November 14, 2016 โ a time when the clerkโs office was closed.โ
The court also held that the Boardโs agenda for the meeting was, according to the decision, โinaccurate and misleading.โ
Sierra Watch is represented by Shute, Mihaly & Weinberger LLP, a public interest law firm specializing in government, land use, renewable energy, and environmental law.
โWeโre proud to play our role in helping Sierra Watch hold officials accountable to the law and protect Californiaโs invaluable natural resources,โ says Amy Bricker, an attorney at the firm.
Looking ahead, Alterra could seek a re-hearing; they could appeal to the California Supreme Court.
Meanwhile, conservationists are celebrating their victory and re-committing themselves to what, so far, has been a ten-year effort.
โThis is great news for Tahoe and everyone who has stood with us to defend our mountain values,โ says Mooers of Sierra Watch.ย โBut our goal was never to win a lawsuit.ย Our goal has always been to protect our Sierra resources for future generations.โ
โAnd we feel like weโre just getting started.โ
Huh. This is pretty interesting.
Sierra Watch wins Squaw Valley court cases! https://t.co/lL2uZufdD7
โ Mike Rogge 🎿 (@skiingrogge) August 25, 2021
Instead of a water park I would think Palisades Tahoe could use existing and pending lifts/gondola/tram to establish a mountain bike park just like Mammoth. This would make it a more year-round destination without the dumb water park idea. Why hasn’t this been considered?
Palisades were used to conquer the Native American’s. lol
Palisaded settlements were common in Colonial America, for protection against indigenous peoples and wild animals. The English settlements in both Jamestown, Virginia (1607) and Plymouth, Massachusetts (1620) were originally fortified towns surrounded by palisades.
Stupid Wokies
Altera sucks and so does Sierra Watch….let ’em fight
or a woke librul
Change a name cause its considered an offensive slur, but not what the original founders felt as was more of a tribute to native american Washoe tribes peeps.
But build a 90,000 sq ft indoor waterpark and 20-25 yrs of increased carbon emissions from construction equipment and trucks?
Yah thats environmental protection and really honoring land preservation.
Way to go Sierra Watch well done.
Oh and hey palisades tahoe, got employee housing and cost of local living pay increase for essential workers? Thought so.
Here before some snowflake get’s upset that it’s not called Sq**w anymore!