< Back to Community News

The History and Future of Wildfire Preparedness

May 27, 2025 | Member Submitted

Published by TRPA

With the recent wildfires in Los Angeles, California (2025) and Davis Fire just west of Reno (2024), wildfire is becoming a more pressing issue for many urban areas that traditionally have not faced this threat. Tahoe’s history and current priorities for forest health and wildfire offer insight into successful actions that can reduce wildfire risk and ensure communities are prepared for wildfire.

ABBREVIATED HISTORY OF FOREST MANAGEMENT AND WILDFIRE AT TAHOE

10,000 years ago The Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California are the original inhabitants of the Tahoe Basin. For more than 10,000 years the Washoe Tribe were stewards of Lake Tahoe and the surrounding environment. Fire played an important role in this stewardship. The Washoe Tribe would perform cultural burns in the forests to reduce overgrowth and promote growth of food and medicinal plants during the next spring. Today, the Washoe Tribe is returning cultural fire to the Tahoe landscape.

1844 – 1890

American explorer John C. Fremont arrived in Tahoe in 1844. From 1860 to 1890, an estimated two-thirds of the Tahoe Basin was clear cut to supply timber for the mines in Virginia City during the Comstock mining era.

1890 – 1960

Following this era of destruction, the forests around Tahoe grew back in an unnatural manner with high tree density and lack of species diversity. At the same time, the federal government adopted a policy of total fire suppression. The combination of fire suppression and unnatural secondary forest growth resulted in high levels of threat from wildfires.

2002

The Gondola Fire burned 600 acres of forest in South Lake Tahoe. Fortunately, there was no property damage. The fire raised awareness among Tahoe agencies and the public about the growing threat of fire.

2004

In response to the Gondola Fire, Tahoe Basin partners adopted the first-ever Community Wildfire Protection Plan for Lake Tahoe. The goal of the plan was to strategically address wildfire risk and create healthy forests.

2007

The Angora Fire burned 3,100 acres and destroyed 254 homes and structures in South Lake Tahoe. This is the most destructive fire in Tahoe’s modern history and was once again a call to action for the Tahoe Basin to address wildfire risk. Following the Angora Fire, Nevada and California created the California-Nevada Tahoe Basin Fire Commission. This commission was tasked with completing a review of the laws, policies, and practices that affect the vulnerability of the Tahoe Basin to wildfires. The Commission’s final report included 48 findings and 90 recommendations organized into six categories that addressed environmental protection, issues of governance, community and homeowner fire prevention, forest and fuels management, fire suppression, and funding.

2017

A report evaluating progress on implementing the Commission’s recommendations found that at the time 59 percent of the recommendations were complete or ongoing, 25 percent partially complete, 7 percent initiated, and 9 percent not started or deemed infeasible.

2021

The Caldor Fire tested the decades of work at Tahoe since the Angora Fire. The Caldor Fire burned into the southern end of the Tahoe Basin, burning roughly 10,000 acres inside the Basin boundary. While the fire destroyed the community of Grizzly Flats to the West of Tahoe, there were no residential homes lost in the Tahoe Basin. The success of fighting the fire is attributed to many factors including forest fuel reduction projects in the area, availability of water to fight the fire, homeowner defensible space measures, favorable wind and weather patterns, and a large firefighting force.

2024

Tahoe Basin public safety agencies released a new basin-wide evacuation plan for the public. This plan was developed by the cooperative efforts of the Lake Tahoe fire chiefs and law enforcement agencies following the Caldor Fire. The plan is intended to provide the public with critical information related to evacuations and is considered a living document that will be updated on an ongoing basis. Tahoe agencies presented about forest health, wildfire, and evacuation planning at the June 7, 2024 meeting of the Interim Oversight Committee for the TRPA and Marlette Lake Water System.

2025

The Tahoe Fires and Fuels Team released an updated Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP) for the Tahoe Basin. The updated plan addresses the region’s evolving wildfire risks, focusing on fuels reduction, preparedness, structural ignitability, and wildfire response.

TAHOE FIRE AND FUELS TEAM

Born out of the Angora Fire in 2007, 21 Tahoe agencies formed the Tahoe Fire and Fuels Team (TFFT) to enhance collaboration around wildfire risk reduction. Since its formation, partners have treated more than 75,000 acres of hazardous fuels and engaged more than 90 certified Fire Adapted Communities in wildfire prevention actions. In 2019, the TFFT released the Forest Action Plan. This document is the Region’s roadmap for achieving comprehensive wildfire risk reduction.

ADDITIONAL WILDFIRE ACTIONS AND BEST PRACTICES

The following is a summary of actions and best practices implemented in the Tahoe Basin to support healthy forests, reduce wildfire risk, and ensure community preparedness.

Vegetation Management

• The 2019 Forest Action Plan identified 22,000 acres of treatments remaining to complete all Basin initial entry wildland-urban interface (WUI) treatments. By the end of 2024, partners had completed approximately 18,000 acres of initial entry WUI treatments. This puts completion of the identified goal of 22,000 acres in the summer of 2025.

• Community Wildfire Protection Plans (CWPP) have become one of the most important wildfire mitigation plans for communities. Many funders of fuel reduction projects have requirements that link back to the need for a CWPP. The Basin completed the first CWPP in 2004 with updates in 2015 and 2025. The 2025 CWPP is crucial for planning the next five years of work and positioning Lake Tahoe for continued funding.

• Policy changes to TRPA’s Code of Ordinances in 2023 allow mechanical treatment on steeper sloped land while maintaining water quality standards. These changes allow more acres to be treated with more efficient equipment allowing public investment to get more work completed. Infrastructure • Basin partners recognized water for fire suppression was an issue during the 2007 Angora Fire. Since 2009, water purveyors on both sides of the Basin have leveraged $20 million in federal funding to install $52 million worth of improvements to their water delivery systems, specifically to address firefighting needs.

• Powerlines are a vital part of the Basin’s infrastructure but are also a major potential source of wildfire ignitions. Through the Powerline Resilience Corridor strategy, utility companies are removing hazards near utility lines and undergrounding transmission lines where feasible.

New and Emerging Technologies

• Fire Aside – a new Defensible Space software program is designed to be more user friendly for implementors and the public. It collects additional data that can be used to model wildfire risk using on-the-ground real time inputs. Partners are working to use this new modeling information to show community-based risk reduction to the insurance industry.

• Land Tender – new decision support tool for land managers uses LiDAR and satellite data to prioritize fuel hazard reduction treatments to provide the greatest returns.

• BurnBot – Tahoe partners attended a presentation of the BurnBot in 2024. BurnBot is a new, innovative tool created to help increase the pace and scale of forest restoration. The $50,000 pilot project masicated 75 percent of the vegetation on 22 acres in three days. This would have taken one hand crew or 20 firefighters 15 days to complete.

• AlertWildfire Cameras – First launched in Lake Tahoe, the AlertWildfire camera program has installed more than 1,000 cameras across six states to provide real-time video monitoring of forests for early detection of wildfire starts.

Capacity building

• Tribal capacity – Tahoe partners have funded staff with the Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California to increase Tribal capacity and presence in the Basin as well as to partners for Tribal led projects at Mayla Wata (Meeks Meadow). The Washoe Tribe also hosted their first ever TREX training which certified crews to complete this type of work.

• Local Fire Departments – Increase staffing and capacity to manage fuel hazard reduction projects on private and local government property as well as to promote Fire Adapted Community education.

• Fire Adapted Communities – The Tahoe Resource Conservation District manages the Basin’s Fire Adapted Communities Program. This program works closely with local fire departments for education, defensible space inspections, community workdays, etc. Transportation and Evacuation Planning

• The transportation system plays a critical role in supporting emergency response and evacuation during wildfire. During the Caldor Fire the entire south shore community evacuated in four hours. Early communication, planning, and engagement with the public were key to the success of this evacuation.

• In 2024, TRPA was awarded a $1.7 million federal PROTECT Grant to help Lake Tahoe law enforcement, fire, and emergency management agencies create plans for resilient transportation infrastructure and emergency communications. The project will deliver plans to harden and improve roadway infrastructure to wildfire and extreme weather events, and improve emergency communications.

Tahoe continues to build resilience for wildfires and treat more acres of forest to reduce wildfire risk. However, we know that it isn’t a matter of if, but when the next wildfire happens. Our goal is to be well prepared.

< Back to Community News

Honoring the Work That Keeps Tahoe Safe

May 27, 2025 | Member Submitted

By Julie Regan, Executive Director of TRPA

Spring in Tahoe enchants us. The scent of wet pine and fresh soil. The birds return before the area’s visitors, and trails once buried under snow are suddenly bustling with hikers. It feels safe. But spring carries a quiet urgency.

Forestry and fire professionals are clear that wildfire no longer obeys a season. The January fires in Southern California were a stark reminder that the threat is year-round. As our climate changes, we must adapt accordingly.

So, while we enjoy a chilly spring and early precipitation, the Tahoe Basin can’t afford to be lulled into complacency.

READ MORE >

Photo credit TRPA

< Back to Community News

PINE NUTS – Do Nothing Day

May 24, 2025 | McAvoy Lane

September 18th has yet to appear in the annals of American history.  Nothing important ever happened on September 18th, well, Sneaky Legs Calhoun lost his virginity on September 18th in 1960, or so he says, and that’s been about it…  

If we’re really searching for something to celebrate, we have to go all the way back to 1895, when the world’s first circumnavigation by a woman on a bicycle began on September 18th, and ended fifteen months later. How she crossed the Atlantic Ocean remains a bitter question, so her name is lost in history.

This unremarkable day inspires me to honor it as a day where nothing ever gets done, and nobody cares; a day of rest if you will.

Since the Sabbath has long since passed out of favor, and the seven-day workweek has come into vogue, we have not designated one single solitary day to doing nothing; September 18th can be our day!

It will be like setting our clocks back in the fall, except we will gain an entire day instead of just an hour, and we won’t have to give it back in the spring.  The idea is to put our feet up, and delight in daydreaming…

Now, employers are going to have to buy into this unofficial holiday, so I would suggest presenting this column in its entirety to your employer today. Depending upon what kind of person your boss is, you might just get September 18th off.  I bet my golden gloves the Comstock Chronicle staff will at least get the afternoon off…

So what are we to do if we are determined to do nothing?  Well, we could start by listening to an audio book. I would recommend Ron Chernow’s recent biography of Mark Twain if it is out…and, of course, if you can get yourself to a beach, well, it just doesn’t get any better than that…

Now, we have to prepare for some resistance. While Europeans work to live, Americans live to work. Therefore, when somebody tries to throw cold water on Do Nothing Day as being frivolous or not necessary, remind them of what Horace shouted: “Carpe Duda!” And if they still don’t get it, whisper what Liza Minnelli has been trying to tell us for years: “Reality is something you rise above.” At least we could rise above reality for this one day, September eighteenth!

If all else fails leave this quote from Leonardo Da Vinci on your desk, and walk away: “Every now and then go away, have a little relaxation, for when you come back to your work your judgment will be surer. Go some distance away because then the work appears smaller and more of it can be taken in at a glance, and a lack of harmony and proportion is more readily seen.”

So there it is, please join Leonardo, Liza, Horace and me in celebrating the eighteenth of September, America’s fast emerging day off, “Do Nothing Day.”  

Audio: https://open.spotify.com/show/7Fhv4PrH1UuwlhbnTT23zO

< Back to Community News

In The News – Pilot Project Launches to Create Tahoe’s Most Wildfire-Ready Community

May 23, 2025 | Member Submitted

Originally Published in Moonshine Ink, 05/23/2025, Tahoe Fund press release

A coalition of wildfire experts, technology companies, energy providers, and nonprofits launched a groundbreaking pilot project on May 20 aimed at creating the most wildfire-ready community in the Lake Tahoe region. The Incline Fire Smart Community Pilot is taking place in the Tyrolian Village HOA, a neighborhood encompassing 228 homes across 60 acres in Incline Village that has been identified as a high-priority wildfire area by the North Lake Tahoe Fire Protection District. 

The pilot is leveraging new technology to identify which mitigations matter the most, while informing insurance outcomes and demonstrating how comprehensive wildfire defense can be implemented and replicated across Tahoe and the West. During a demonstration, the public was able to see a remote-operated masticator from BurnBot remove hazardous fuels in the neighborhood up to 5 feet from homes. Attendees also heard from a panel of experts on how the project came together and the science and strategy behind it. Watch the panel here.

The pilot includes seven phases, of which the first two are already underway: the Baseline Risk Modeling and Assessment and the Neighborhood-Scale Vegetation Treatment.

READ MORE >

Learn more at tahoefund.org/inclinefiresmartpilot.

Photo: Burnbot Pilot – Credit Tahoe Fund

< Back to Community News

The Local Lens – Memorial Day Weekend

May 21, 2025 | Linda Offerdahl

Memorial Day Weekend is early this year. It’s hard to decide what to do…ski at Palisades? Hit the golf course?  Or go hiking?  Or all of the above! But start your Monday at the Village Green for the annual Vets Club Memorial Day Celebration. Note the new location! Three reasons for moving it: easier for people, especially the older Vets, to get to the site, open to everyone without an IVGID card, and the most important: site dedication and installation of the flags for the Vets Memorial monument. This effort is led by Michael Goss, including the funding and all of the work to get it through the political process at IVGID. Thank you, Michael! Thanks to all of the Veterans for their service to our country…and to the organizations that support them: Incline Village Veterans Club, Onward Ops, PTSD Now!, and Military Officers of America Association.

MAIN STREET BEAUTIFICATION

The roundabout is looking fabulous right now, thanks to Incline Property Management for doing the annual clean-up, pro bono. Thank you, Larry Wodarski and crew! Speaking of the roundabout, a Main Street committee is working on a redesign of the roundabout that would make it more visible to drivers, add irrigation so we can have more perennials, and add more iconic granite boulders to mark it as the gateway to Incline Village and the beautiful East Shore.

Village Clean-up on June 7, starting at Incline Library.

Gather your family and neighbors to pitch in on this important endeavor. Pine needles and other yard debris can present fire hazards, and it’s shocking to see how much litter accumulates over the winter. It’s a twofer…cleaning helps beautify our community as well. Businesses participate as well. Thank you to the many landscapers and yard crews that do so much of the grunt work.

Your reward is the Block Party on June 7? Join the BBQ at the Incline Library Block Party and Summer Reading Kick-off. They are celebrating 20 years in the new building. There will be plenty of nonprofit tables with handouts and activities for kids.

Public Art Committee

Here is another effort to beautify Incline and make it a welcoming place for visitors. It is busy finding symbols of our community and how to incorporate them into functional art pieces that establish an identity for Incline Village. We have a lot of public art already. If you haven’t noticed, it’s time to get out of your car and take a walk! Can you find….Buddha’s eye (UNR lake Tahoe campus), five kids in a Tree (Incline Library), the Parasol Building Statue? I also recommend two walks: The Earth Walk by the Visitor Center with its Galis Dongal (Washoe tribe dwelling) in front. Thank you, Jacqui Chandler!  The East Shore Trail has murals in the tunnel that are fun to discover. 

HOMEBUYERS WORKSHOP TOMORROW NIGHT

Incline Village Realtors is spearheading this event at the Chateau on May 22. If you ever dreamed of owning your own home but thought it was out of reach, come and get inspired and learn what assistance is available.

NUTRITION CLASS AT NATURAL GROCER ON SATURDAY

I am greatly relieved to hear that not all fats are bad! Learn more on Saturday at “Demystifying Fat” at Natural Grocer. Why not start your Saturday shopping at this unique market AND go to the class!

LIKE WHAT YOU READ?

IVCBA is the Community and Business Association that promotes our local businesses and nonprofits, organizes community events, and produces the Weekly SnapShot!  If you are a subscriber and regular reader, please join as a Community Supporter for $50. If you are not a subscriber, do for free! Go to IVCBA.org. We are financially supported by our local agency “investors”, and our business community and residents. Please help! JOIN HERE

< Back to Community News

This Memorial Day Remember the Fallen – and Recommit to the Living

May 21, 2025 | Member Submitted

< Back to Community News

In The News – Incline High opens three-story expansion

May 21, 2025 | Member Submitted

Originally published in the Tahoe Daily Tribune, 05/21/2025, Written by Leah Carter

Incline High School unveiled its newest expansion and renovation project on Thursday, May 15. The expansion, funded by a grant from the Dave and Cheryl Duffield Foundation, includes a three-story, 12,000-square-foot addition to the campus. 

Some of the new features in the building included a culinary arts kitchen, a student and community hub, a dance studio and new classrooms for the Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Corps. The event began with a ribbon cutting at the JROTC entrance to the building, followed by presentations in the student/collaborative hub and an open house. 

Parents, students and faculty were wide-eyed as they toured the new facilities, including a kitchen and cafeteria complete with walk-in fridges and even a Marzanno espresso machine. 

READ MORE >

Photo Credit: Washoe County School District

< Back to Community News

Call for Submissions: Youth National Anthem Performer for the 4th of July Parade

May 21, 2025 | Julie Malkin-Manning

Do you know a talented young singer with a love for our country and a passion for performing? We’re looking for a local youth performer to sing the National Anthem at this year’s Local Heroes Community Parade on the 4th of July!

This is a wonderful opportunity for a young vocalist (ages 8–18) to shine in front of their community and help kick off a celebration honoring our local heroes.

Event Date: Thursday, July 3rd
Location: Corner of Southwood & Incline Way (Bowl Incline sign)
Time: 10:00 AM

How to Submit:
Please send a short video audition (under 2 minutes) to julie@ivcba.org by June 16. Be sure to include the performer’s name, age, and contact information.

Let’s celebrate Independence Day with the incredible voices of our next generation—submit today and help us make this 4th of July unforgettable!

< Back to Community News

Creating Tahoe’s Most Wildfire-Ready Community

May 21, 2025 | Member Submitted

Submitted by NLTFPD, Tia Rancourt, 05/20/2025

In recognition of Wildfire Awareness Month, a coalition of wildfire experts, technology companies, energy providers, and nonprofits launched a groundbreaking pilot project today aimed at creating the most wildfire-ready community in the Lake Tahoe region. 

The Incline Fire Smart Community Pilot is taking place in the Tyrolian Village HOA, a neighborhood encompassing 228 homes across 60 acres in Incline Village, Nevada that has been identified as a high priority wildfire area by the North Lake Tahoe Fire Protection District. 

The pilot is leveraging new technology to identify which mitigations matter the most, while informing insurance outcomes and demonstrating how comprehensive wildfire defense can be implemented and replicated across Tahoe and the West. 

“This initiative has the potential to fundamentally change how communities approach wildfire resilience,” said Amy Berry, CEO of the Tahoe Fund. “We’re combining cutting-edge modeling and state-of-the-art technology with on-the-ground mitigation on public lands, NV Energy’s utility corridor, and in the neighborhood to create a replicable blueprint that can save lives, protect property, and preserve natural resources, while informing insurance outcomes.”

During a demonstration today, the public was able to see a remote-operated masticator from BurnBot remove hazardous fuels in the neighborhood up to five feet from homes. Attendees also heard from a panel of experts on how the project came together and the science and strategy behind it. You can watch the panel discussion here.

< Back to Community News

In The News – Incline High School swim team state championship results

May 20, 2025 | Member Submitted

Originally Published in the Tahoe Daily Tribune, 5/20/2025, Written by Katelyn Welsh

The Incline High School swim team completed its season at the Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association’s (NIAA) 3A State Swimming Championships on Saturday, May 17, at the Moana Springs pool in Reno, Nev. The team had 10 student-athletes span four individual events and three relays.

Senior and co-captain Ava Hane finished 4th in both the 200 yard individual medley and the 100 yard backstroke. Hane out competed Tahoe-Truckee basin competitor Kyla McCarthy Smith of Truckee High School (6th), but fell behind South Tahoe High School’s Nichole Whisnant (2nd) in the medley. In the 100 yard breaststroke, Hane, with a time of 1:17.18, was just behind Truckee High School’s Sophia Martin, with a time of 1:17.13. Hane outcompeted North Tahoe High School’s Maren Plumb by over two seconds.

Senior and other co-Captain William Arrison finished 7th in both the 200-yard individual medley and the 100-yard backstroke. Truckee High’s Caleb Edwards (5th) outcompeted Arrison in the medley. In the breaststroke competition, Arrison beat Truckee High School’s Jack Ridgel by close to three seconds. North Tahoe’s Dexter Vastine beat Arrison by almost four seconds.

READ MORE >

Photo provided by Tahoe Daily Tribune

Sign up for our weekly SnapShot newsletter

Translate