Description: County boundaries within TRPA jurisdiction. It was derived from the U.S. Geological Survey State Boundaries, which were derived from Digital Line Graph (DLG) files representing the 1:2,000,000-scale map in the National Atlas of the United States.
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Description: Three-hundred foot buffer from the Lake Tahoe high water line or mark. The high water line is a contour representing the center of the 1898 and 1899 meter DEM elevation values in the Lake Tahoe Region. This was derived from the 2010 LIDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) data (matches the Tahoe_HE_N.img and Tahoe HE_S.img raster images).H (SIG_Tahoe external hard drive):\Revised LiDAR Data\Rasters\Hydro_Enforced\South\Tahoe_HE_S.img.
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Description: Relates to the Plan Area Statements and indicates plan area boundaries, special area boundaries, preliminary community plan boundaries, redevelopment and master plan boundaries, hydrologic related area boundaries, and other related information.Revised on September 18, 2013 to include a northeastern parcel (Kingsbury Manor Mobile Home Park) into the Tahoe-Mixed Use/Town Center Overlay zoning district.
Service Item Id: 7a0290d8e9ab4513bbba4c34405c5507
Copyright Text: No warranty expressed or implied is made by the TRPA regarding the utility of the data, nor shall the act of distribution constitute any such warranty. Much of the TRPA GIS data is parcel based and therefore attribute data for such features are constantly changing. We recognize these errors and make an effort to correct them as they are discovered. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency does not warrant in any way that data will meet the user`s requirements, will be complete, uninterrupted or error free, or that any defects will be corrected.
Description: Relates to the Plan Area Statements and indicates plan area boundaries, special area boundaries, preliminary community plan boundaries, redevelopment and master plan boundaries, hydrologic related area boundaries, and other related information.Revised on September 18, 2013 to include a northeastern parcel (Kingsbury Manor Mobile Home Park) into the Tahoe-Mixed Use/Town Center Overlay zoning district.
Service Item Id: 7a0290d8e9ab4513bbba4c34405c5507
Copyright Text: No warranty expressed or implied is made by the TRPA regarding the utility of the data, nor shall the act of distribution constitute any such warranty. Much of the TRPA GIS data is parcel based and therefore attribute data for such features are constantly changing. We recognize these errors and make an effort to correct them as they are discovered. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency does not warrant in any way that data will meet the user`s requirements, will be complete, uninterrupted or error free, or that any defects will be corrected.
Description: Attribute Table fields:ZONING_ID: Zoning codeZONING_DESCRIPTION: Zoning descriptionPLAN_ID: Plan numberPLAN_NAME: Name of planPLAN_TYPE: Type of planSPECIAL_AREA_NAME: Name of special areasSPECIAL_AREA_NUMBER: Special area numberOVERLAY: Type of overlayACRES: Area of plan (acres)*Overlay: Transition, Core, and Gateway areas (within town centers) for Placer County Tahoe Basin Area PlanPAS ID 1987: Old PAS ID.*Special Planning Area Overlay: (Y/N) Local plan polygon is located within a special planning area overlay (this is only applicable to Placer County). Note that the special planning area overlay polygons do not line up 100% with the local plan polygon and therefore, if only a portion of the Local Plan polygon is within a Special Planning Area Overlay polygon it is labeled Yes. Town Center: (Y/N) Local Plan polygon is located within a Town Center. Note that the Town Center polygons do not line up 100% with the Local Plan polygon and therefore, if only a portion of the Local Plan polygon is within a Town Center polygon it is labeled Yes. Special Area: (Y/N) Local Plan polygon is located within a Special Area. Note that the Special Area polygons do not line up 100% with the Local Plan polygon and therefore, if only a portion of the Local Plan polygon is within a Special Area polygon it is labeled Yes. CNEL: Community Noise Equivalent Level (CNEL) is a weighted average of noise level over time. It is used to compare the noisiness of Local Plan areas.*Applies to Placer County Area Plan Only____________________________________________________________Placer County Tahoe Basin Area Plan:The Placer County Tahoe Basin Area Plan replaced two Placer County General Plans, six Placer County Community Plans, 57 Placer County Plan Area Statements, and the Placer County Standards & Guidelines for Signage, Parking, and Design. Amendments from prior plans are focused within the TRPA designated Town Centers of Tahoe City, Kings Beach, and North Stateline. In the Town Centers, development standards are reformed and environmental improvements are planned in accordance with the Regional Plan and TMDL. Outside the Town Centers a "Village Center" concept is embraced for the existing commercial areas. Mixed use zoning, new design standards, and parking amendments apply within Town and Village Centers. Additional opportunities for secondary residences on lots less than an acre in size are also provided where the secondary residence is deed restricted to not allow for tourist uses or vacation rentals and where it is deed restricted for affordability. The Special Planning Area Overlay Districts from the Area Plan can be found in the "Special Areas" SDE layer.Mixed-Use subdistricts are classified within one of four subareas: Greater Tahoe City, North Tahoe East, North Tahoe West, and West Shore. Greater Tahoe City zoning subdistricts include Mixed-Use Recreation (MU-REC), Mixed-Use Neighborhood Tourist (MU-NT), Mixed-Use Town Center (MU-TC), Mixed-Use Service (MU-S), Mixed-Use Neighborhood (MU-N), Mixed-Use Neighborhood Dollar Hill (MUN-DH), and Mixed-Use Neighborhood Lake Forest Glen (MUN-LFG).North Tahoe East zoning subdistricts include Mixed-Use Lakeside Town Center (MU-LTC), Mixed-Use Mountainside Town Center (MU-MTC), Mixed-Use Waterfront Recreation (MU-WREC), Mixed-Use Tourist (MU-TOR), and Mixed-Use Residential (MU-R).North Tahoe West zoning subdistricts include Mixed-Use Gateway East (MU-GE), Mixed-Use Gateway West (MU-GW), Mixed-Use Community Center East (MU-CCE), Mixed-Use Community Center West (MU-CCW), and Mixed-Use Neighborhood Center (MU-NC).West Shore zoning subdistricts include Sunnyside Village Center, Homewood Village Center, and Tahoma Village Center.North Tahoe East and Greater Tahoe City subareas have Transition, Core, and Gateway area overlays within the town centers.Core Areas: Maximum building height is four stories and 56 feet, subject to further findings listed in plan.Transition Areas: Maximum building height is three stories and 46 feet, subject to further findings listed in plan. Projects within transition areas must propose sidewalk or multi-use trail connections to Town Center Core areas or will be ineligible.Gateway Areas: Gateway areas shall be consistent with the Design Guidelines for Gateways (Subsection 3.09.G of plan).____________________________________________________________Tahoe Valley Area Plan:TRPA adopted the Regional Plan Update in December 2012 which called for local agencies to prepare area plans to replace Plan Area Statements and Community Plan and provide a local approach to directing and regulating land use in the Tahoe Basin. The City adopted its first area plan, the Tourist Core Area Plan, in October 2013 . The City started working on the Tahoe Valley Plan in January 2014. The process included extensive community outreach, including a series of community Workshops held on January 27, 2014, June 19, 2014 and July 21, 2014, to solicit input on the Tahoe Valley Area. The City used the Tahoe Valley Community Plan as a starting point, worked with TRPA staff, and reached out to local property and business owners to get their input on the plan. The City also approached the planning process creatively and holistically, noting ways that environmental improvements like stormwater systems could serve multiple purposes, like enhancing the area’s transportation system. The City also used the Tourist Core Area Plan design standards as a starting point, looked at other cities that successfully require mountain or alpine architecture, and created design standards that would apply to the Tahoe Valley area. The draft plans integrates land use and transportation to create a sustainable land use patter that support complete streets, walkable centers, and connected neighborhoods.The Tahoe Valley Plan provides a future vision for the Tahoe Valley area and policy and project guidance to implement that vision. The Tahoe Valley Plan includes improvements to public infrastructure and circulation to better serve the businesses and residents of the area, incentives for private property investment to revitalize the area, and standards to ensure that future development is consistent with the vision and environmental goals of the City. The Tahoe Valley Plan focuses on creating a commercial, mixed-use, and multi-family development that are pedestrian friendly and transit oriented while harmonizing with the overall natural environment of the Lake Tahoe Basin.___________________________________________________________Tourist Core Area Plan:The zoning districts for the Tourist Core Area Plan are Tourist Center Core (TSC-C), Tourist Center Mixed-Use (TSC-MU), Tourist Center Mixed-Use Corridor (TSC-MUC), Tourist Center Gateway (TSC-G) and Tourist Center Neighborhood Mixed-Use (TSC-NMX). Tourist Center Core (TSC-C): This district is the activity center of the Tourist Core Area Plan and intended to become a commercial, tourist and recreation destination with public gathering places, animated streets and intensive retail activity meeting the needs of both tourists and residents of the south shore. This district allows for horizontal and vertical mixed use projects with a focus on street-level active storefronts encouraging pedestrian activity. The sub-district contains complete streets that support multi-modal transportation options. Permissible uses include tourist accommodation, retail commercial, entertainment, restaurants, recreation and mixed-use residential development.Tourist Center Mixed-Use (TSC-MU): This district is intended to primarily provide for tourist accommodation uses, with supporting retail commercial uses to meet the regional demand for quality accommodation in the Stateline area in a manner compatible with a pedestrian environment.Tourist Center Mixed-Use Corridor (TSC-MUC): This district is intended to support Ski Run Boulevard as a multi-modal, mixed-used corridor with a wide array of uses that encourage pedestrian activity. Permissible uses include a rich mixture of employment services, professional offices, commercial, public service, recreation, tourist accommodation and residential organized around an aesthetically-pleasing pedestrian environment.Tourist Center Gateway (TSC-G): This district is intended to create an attractive mixed-use commercial and tourist accommodation corridor that provides a welcoming gateway to the South Shore area. The physical form varies to reflect the mixed-use character of the gateway corridor and to transition to the more intensive Tourist Center Core District. Permissible uses include tourist accommodation, residential, commercial, restaurants, and recreation.Tourist Center Neighborhood Mixed Use (TSC-NMX): This district is intended to allow a variety of residential and non-residential uses to encourage a greater mix and intensity of uses in a pedestrian scaled environment that is appropriate to its neighborhood context and adjacent residential uses. Permissible uses include commercial, public service, professional offices, as well as residential and tourist development.Recreation (REC): This district is intended to allow a variety of recreation uses such as dispersed recreation and parks . Permissible uses include day use areas and group facilities.Open Space (OS): This district is intended to preserve land in its present use that would: 1) conserve and enhance natural or scenic resources; 2) protect streams environment zones, sensitive lands, water quality or water supply; 3) promote soil and habitat conservation; 4) enhance recreation opportunities; and/or 5) preserve visual quality along highways, roads, and street corridors or scenic vistas. The land is predominantly open, undeveloped, or in a lightly developed and is suitable for any of the following: natural areas, wildlife and native plant habitat; erosion control facilities, stream environment zones, stream corridors; passive parks; and/or trails for non-motorized activities._______________________________________________________________South Shore Area Plan (SSAP):The SSAP went into effect on December 5, 2013. The SSAP was developed to be consistent with the Goals and Policies of the Lake Tahoe Regional Plan and meet the provisions of Chapter 13, Area Plans, in the TRPA Code of Ordinances. The SSAP includes four separate components that will be integrated into Douglas County planning documents, including the Douglas County Master Plan, Zoning Map, Development Code, and Design Criteria and Improvement Standards. The following zoning districts have been established to implement the South Shore Area Plan:"T-T/HDT Overlay (Tahoe High Density Tourist District). This overlay district contains existing hotel/casino towers and is targeted for redevelopment in a manner that improves environmental conditions, creates a more sustainable and less auto-dependent development pattern, provides greater access to recreational opportunities, and provides economic opportunities. The district is the appropriate location for the Lake Tahoe Region’s highest intensity development.“T-MU/TC” (Tahoe – Mixed Use/Town Center Overlay). This district is for areas that are targeted for redevelopment and that may include a mix of tourist, recreation, commercial, light industrial, public service, and residential uses. This overlay district is for areas targeted for redevelopment in a manner that improves environmental conditions, creates a more sustainable and less auto-dependent development pattern and provides economic opportunities and future development that will bring environmental gain to the Region.“T-R” (Tahoe – Recreation). This district is for private and public recreation areas, such as golf courses, beaches, state parks, and ski resorts.“T-RR” (Tahoe – Resort Recreation). This district is limited to Edgewood Mountain parcels and allows for tourist, commercial and residential uses provided in conjunction with a recreation use. New development must be the result of development transfers that result in the retirement of existing development.
Service Item Id: 7a0290d8e9ab4513bbba4c34405c5507
Copyright Text: City of South Lake Tahoe Planning, Land Use, and Zoning. City of South Lake Tahoe, CA GIS Staff. Contact info: Eric Friedlander (efriedlander@cityofslt.us); John Hitchcock, 530-542-7472, jhitchcock@cityofslt.us
Douglas County, NV GIS Department, Phone: 775-782-9895, lmontoya@co.douglas.nv.us
Placer County Community Development Resource Agency-Geographic Information Systems Division. 3091 County Center Dr., Auburn CA, 95603, 530-745-3000 Contacts: Christine Onesi and Kelly Berger
Alyssa Bettinger, Tahoe Regoinal Planning Agency, abettinger@trpa.org
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Description: Relates to the Plan Area Statements and indicates plan area boundaries, special area boundaries, preliminary community plan boundaries, redevelopment and master plan boundaries, hydrologic related area boundaries, and other related information.
Description: Relates to the Plan Area Statements and indicates plan area boundaries, special area boundaries, preliminary community plan boundaries, redevelopment and master plan boundaries, hydrologic related area boundaries, and other related information.
Description: Relates to the Plan Area Statements and indicates plan area boundaries, special area boundaries, preliminary community plan boundaries, redevelopment and master plan boundaries, hydrologic related area boundaries, and other related information.Descriptions of conceptual land-use per TRPA Regional Plan, Chapter 2 (Land Use Element), 2012 (under the descrip field):Wilderness: Wilderness Districts are designated and defined by the U.S. Congress as part of the National Wilderness Preservation System. These lands offer outstanding opportunities for solitude and primitive, unconfined recreation experiences, and they contain ecological, geological, and other features of scientific, educational, scenic and historic value. The wilderness designation is intended to protect and preserve such areas for present and future generations. These lands are managed to prevent the degradation of wilderness character. Natural ecological processes and functions are preserved, and restored where necessary. Permanent improvements and mechanized uses are prohibited. Wilderness District lands within the Tahoe Region include portions of the Desolation, Granite Chief and Mount Rose Wilderness Areas. Backcountry: Backcountry Districts are designated and defined by the U.S. Forest Service as part of their Resource Management Plans. These lands are roadless areas including Dardanelles/Meiss, Freel Peak and Lincoln Creek. On these lands, natural ecological processes are primarily free from human influences. Backcountry areas offer a recreation experience similar to wilderness, with places for people seeking natural scenery and solitude. Primitive and semi-primitive recreation opportunities include hiking, camping, wildlife viewing, and cross-country skiing, in addition to more developed or mechanized activities not allowed in wilderness areas (e.g., mountain biking, snowmobiling). Management activities that support administrative and dispersed recreation activities are minimal, but may have a limited influence. Limited roads may be present in some backcountry areas; road reconstruction may be permitted on backcountry lands where additional restrictions do not apply. Backcountry areas contribute to ecosystem and species diversity and sustainability, serve as habitat for fauna and flora, and offer wildlife corridors. These areas provide a diversity of terrestrial and aquatic habitats, and support species dependent on large, undisturbed areas of land. Backcountry areas are managed to preserve and restore healthy watersheds with clean water and air, and healthy soils. Watershed processes operate in harmony with their setting, providing high quality aquatic habitats. Conservation: Conservation areas are non-urban areas with value as primitive or natural areas, with strong environmental limitations on use, and with a potential for dispersed recreation or low intensity resource management. Conservation areas include (1) public lands already set aside for this purpose, (2) high-hazard lands, stream environment zones, and other fragile areas, without substantial existing improvements, (3) isolated areas which do not contain the necessary infrastructure for development, (4) areas capable of sustaining only passive recreation or non-intensitve agriculture, and (5) areas suitable for low-to-moderate resource management.Recreation: Recreation areas are non-urban areas with good potential for developed outdoor recreation, park use, or concentrated recreation. Lands which this plan identified as recreation areas include (1) areas of existing private and public recreation use, (2) designated local, state, and federal recreation areas, (3) areas without overriding environmental constraints on resource management or recreational purposes, and (4) areas with unique recreational resources which may service public needs, such as beaches and ski areas. Resort Recreation: Resort Recreation areas are the specific Edgewood and Heavenly parcels depicted on Map 1 of the Regional Plan. Residential: Residential areas are urban areas having potential to provide housing for the residents of the Region. In addition, the purpose of this classification is to identify density patterns related to both the physical and manmade characteristics of the land and to allow accessory and non-residential uses that complement the residential neighborhood. These lands include: (1) areas now developed for residential purposes; (2) areas of moderate-to-good land capability; (3) areas within urban boundaries and serviced by utilities; and (4) areas of centralized location in close proximity to commercial services and public facilities. Mixed-Use: Mixed-use areas are urban areas that have been designated to provide a mix of commercial, public services, light industrial, office, and residential uses to the Region or have the potential to provide future commercial, public service, light industrial, office, and residential uses. The purpose of this classification is to concentrate higher intensity land uses for public convenience, and enhanced sustainability. Tourist: Tourist areas are urban areas that have the potential to provide intensive tourist accommodations and services or intensive recreation. This land use classification also includes areas recognized by the Bi-State Compact as suitable for gaming. These lands include areas that are: 1) already developed with high concentrations of visitor services, visitor accommodations, and related uses; 2) of good to moderate land capability (land capability districts 4-7); 3) with existing excess land coverage; and 4) located near commercial services, employment centers, public services and facilities, transit facilities, pedestrian paths, and bicycle connections See special planning districts layers for these additional conceptual planning areas:Town Center District: Town centers contain most of the Region’s non-residential services and have been identified as a significant source of sediments and other contaminants that continue to enter Lake Tahoe. Town centers are targeted for redevelopment in a manner that improves environmental conditions, creates a more sustainable and less auto-dependent development pattern and provides economic opportunities in the Region. Regional Center District: The Regional Center includes a variety of land uses in the core of South Lake Tahoe, including the Gondola and base lodge facilities for Heavenly Ski Area. Development patterns in the Regional Center have been and should continue to be more intensive that town centers and less intensive that the High Density Tourist District. Older development within the Regional Center is a significant source of sediment and other water contaminants. The Regional Center is targeted for redevelopment in a manner that improves environmental conditions, creates a more sustainable and less auto-dependent development pattern and provides economic opportunities in the Region. High Density Tourist District: The High Density Tourist District contains a concentration of hotel/casino towers and is targeted for redevelopment in a manner that improves environmental conditions, creates a more sustainable and less auto-dependent development pattern and provides economic opportunities for local residents. The High Density Tourist District is the appropriate location for the Region’s highest intensity development. Stream Restoration Plan Area: Stream Restoration Plan Areas are Stream Environment Zones along major waterways that have been substantially degraded by prior or existing development. Individual Restoration Plans should be developed for each Stream Restoration Plan Area in coordination with the applicable local government and property owners in the plan area. Restoration Plans may be developed as a component of an Area Plan or as a separate document and should identify feasible opportunities for environmental restoration. Land-Use1 key: COM/PS - Commercial/Plan Statement, CONS - Conservation, REC - Recreation, RES - Residential, TOR - Tourist
Description: Relates to the Regional Plan Update (12.12.12) in regards to transfer of development and transfer of development rights. "Units_Righ" refers to the number of bonus units from a development right a parcel would receive in that specific zone. Only vacant parcels are eligible. In exchange for preserving the parcel, this # of development rights can be transferred to a town center area, outside of sensitive coverage areas (in compliance with other allocation, development, and environmental restrictions per the TRPA Code of Ordinances and TRPA Regional Plan). Disclaimer: these are general estimates, a parcel scale verification in compliance with TRPA codes and regulations, is required."Units_DEV" refers to the number of bonus units a parcel would receive for an actual devloped parcel in that specific zone. Only eligible for existing development. In exchange for preserving the parcel (restoring it to a natural condition), this # of development rights can be transferred to a town center area, outside of sensitive coverage areas (in compliance with other allocation, development, and environmental restrictions per the TRPA Code of Ordinances and TRPA Regional Plan). Disclaimer: these are general estimates, a parcel scale verification in compliance with TRPA codes and regulations, is required.
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Description: Relates to the Regional Plan Update (12.12.12) in regards to transfer of development and transfer of development rights. "Units_Righ" refers to the number of bonus units from a development right a parcel would receive in that specific zone. Only vacant parcels are eligible. In exchange for preserving the parcel, this # of development rights can be transferred to a town center area, outside of sensitive coverage areas (in compliance with other allocation, development, and environmental restrictions per the TRPA Code of Ordinances and TRPA Regional Plan). Disclaimer: these are general estimates, a parcel scale verification in compliance with TRPA codes and regulations, is required."Units_DEV" refers to the number of bonus units a parcel would receive for an actual devloped parcel in that specific zone. Only eligible for existing development. In exchange for preserving the parcel (restoring it to a natural condition), this # of development rights can be transferred to a town center area, outside of sensitive coverage areas (in compliance with other allocation, development, and environmental restrictions per the TRPA Code of Ordinances and TRPA Regional Plan). Disclaimer: these are general estimates, a parcel scale verification in compliance with TRPA codes and regulations, is required.
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Description: County parcel data and boundaries for Douglas County, El Dorado County, Placer County, Washoe County, and Carson City County within the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency's jurisdiction. Updates occure every ~6 months. Last updates in 2016,
Service Item Id: 7a0290d8e9ab4513bbba4c34405c5507
Copyright Text: Douglas County, El Dorado County, Placer County, Washoe County, and Carson City County and TRPA.
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Description: This data set is a digital soil survey and generally is the most detailed level of soil geographic data developed by the National Cooperative Soil Survey. The information was prepared by digitizing maps, by compiling information onto a planimetric correct base and digitizing, or by revising digitized maps using remotely sensed and other information. This data set consists of georeferenced digital map data and computerized attribute data. The map data are in a soil survey area extent format and include a detailed, field verified inventory of soils and miscellaneous areas that normally occur in a repeatable pattern on the landscape and that can be cartographically shown at the scale mapped. A special soil features layer (point and line features) is optional. This layer displays the location of features too small to delineate at the mapping scale, but they are large enough and contrasting enough to significantly influence use and management. The soil map units are linked to attributes in the National Soil Information System relational database, which gives the proportionate extent of the component soils and their properties.
Service Item Id: 7a0290d8e9ab4513bbba4c34405c5507
Copyright Text: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service
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Description: Indicates land capability boundaries within the Lake Tahoe Basin. This version of the land capability data is a non-adopted Tom Sinclair version. This version includes edits from Tom Sinclair (mostly regarding the stream environment zones) to update and refine the Bailey Land Capability classification system. Land capability challenges can be conducted in accordance with 30.3.4. in the TRPA Code of Ordinances and other applicable regulations. Land Capability Classes: 1A, 1B (Stream Environmental Zone - SEZ), 1C, and 2 = base allowable land coverage is 1% (only one percent of these lands can be developed based on land coverage regulations); 3 = 5%; 4 = 20%; 5 = 25%; 6 and 7 = 30%. 1A-C, 2, and 3 are environmentally sensitive lands and 4-7 are less environmentally sensitive lands.The Threshold Standard (Dec. 2012 Threshold Evaluation Report, Soil Chapter) for impervious surface reads as follows: “Impervious cover shall comply with the Land-Capability Classification of the Lake Tahoe Basin, California-Nevada, A Guide for Planning, Bailey, 1974.” The adopted Impervious Cover Threshold Standard is guided by Robert Bailey’s land capability classification system for the Lake Tahoe Basin (Bailey 1974).Bailey (1974) assigned units of land throughout the Basin to one of nine land capability classes (1a, 1b, 1c, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7), from most toleast environmentally sensitive, believing that in order to maintain "environmental balance," each capability class has a capacity for development, which should not be exceeded. Factors for determining capability classes included tolerance for developed use, slope percent, relative erosion potential, runoff potential, and disturbance hazards (Bailey 1974). Each land capability class was assigned an allowable percentage of impervious cover, ranging from 1 percent for sensitive lands in classes 1a, 1b, 1c, and 2, to 30 percent for higher tolerance lands in classes 6 and 7. TRPA Code of Ordinances, 2012, Chapter 90 (definitions): Sensitive Lands includes Land Capability Districts 1, 2, 3; and lands with the backshore (land area located between the highwater line of the lake and teh upland area of instability or the wave run-up area) and non-sensitive lands includes 4, 5, 6, or 7; and lands not within the back shore.
Description: This dataset was completed by the Tahoe Research Group in 1989 and identifies the location of spawning areas and habitat for game fish and forage fish in Lake Tahoe. Spawning and habitat areas targeted for restoration are also identified.
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