Wed. Mar 19th, 2025
An aerial view of a dark blue lake with boats on it near a dock that's next to a two-way street and a forest of sugar pine trees.
An aerial view of a dark blue lake with boats on it near a dock that's next to a two-way street and a forest of sugar pine trees.
An aerial view of Lake Tahoe from Homewood on Sept. 25, 2024. Photo by Miguel Gutierrez Jr., CalMatters

Lake Tahoe is sick, and getting worse. This alpine treasure, tucked in the Sierra Nevada, is facing an array of problems that humans inflict on it: Murky waters, pollutants, toxic algae, development, tourism, traffic. Buffeted by the constant tug between developing the region and preserving it, and attracting visitors while managing their impact, Lake Tahoe is showing the strain.

In a two-part series, CalMatters environment reporter Julie Cart and statistical journalist Natasha Uzcátegui-Liggett reveal how the billions of dollars spent on improving the health of the Tahoe region have not resolved the lake’s problems, and how regional planners have recently shifted much of their focus to promoting tourism and recreation projects. 

No other natural landscape is managed the way Lake Tahoe is. It has its own concierge, a unique California-Nevada agency that holds great power. Many local residents think the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency is veering off course.

  • Serrell Smokey, chairperson of the Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California, the region’s original inhabitants: “The lake needs a break. It’s a living entity that’s been abused by constant pressure every year.” 

The Tahoe region, encircled by dense forests, also is one of California’s riskiest places for potentially deadly and out-of-control wildfires. Fire officials told CalMatters that thousands of people could be trapped because of inadequate evacuation routes. Yet developers keep building resorts.

Evacuating the entire Tahoe basin in the height of summer could take 14 hours, according to one analysis commissioned by environmental groups. People scrambling to get out of Lake Tahoe ahead of a wildfire would have few options as the lake is encircled by a single two-lane road.

  • Scott Robbins, South Lake Tahoe City Councilmember: “If a fire breaks out quickly on a high wind advisory day, in a worst-case scenario, you can’t evacuate. The reality is it will not be survivable.” 

Read more about the myriad of issues facing Tahoe and the region’s wildfire risks in Julie’s stories.


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CalMatters events: CalMatters will host a symposium on April 16 about the mental health crisis among California youth. Register here to attend in person at the Nixon Peabody Office in Los Angeles.


Other Stories You Should Know


An even bigger Medi-Cal budget gap

The back of a person, wearing turquoise-colored medical scrubs and a face mask, as they walk towards automatic sliding doors at the entrance of a metal and glass building. The person holds sheets of paper on their right hand and they look towards their left side.
A hospital employee enters Alta Bates Summit Medical Center in Oakland on Aug. 24, 2020. Photo by Anne Wernikoff for CalMatters

Last week Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administration said it would need to borrow $3.4 billion from the state’s general fund to cover a budget gap in Medi-Cal. But it turns out that California is going to need a lot more than that, reports CalMatters’ Ana B. Ibarra.

California health care officials told the Legislature on Monday that the state will need an additional $2.8 billion to pay Medi-Cal providers through the end of the fiscal year. That brings the total Medi-Cal budget shortfall to $6.2 billion.

Medi-Cal provides health insurance for 15 million disabled and low-income Californians. Republican legislators have attributed this budget gap to the state’s expansion of Medi-Cal over the years to immigrants regardless of their legal status, which costs about $8.5 billion a year, according to a recent budget hearing

Besides increased enrollment, other reasons are contributing towards the state’s higher-than-anticipated Medi-Cal spending, said Michelle Bass, the director of the Department of Health Care Services. That includes rising pharmacy costs; more seniors signing up for the program; and a smaller number of Medi-Cal disenrollments after the pandemic than previously assumed.

  • Bass, during an Assembly budget hearing: “These changes were unprecedented, and all happened at once.” 

Read more here.

A tax break to keep CA veterans?

A person wearing a purple jacket with a "Combat Wounded Veteran" patch and a "Purple Heart" cap sits watching a parade. In the background, a group of scouts in uniform march down a city street, carrying a large American flag. Trees with autumn-colored leaves and modern glass buildings line the street.
Army veteran Andy Zoglman, 77, watches an American flag pass by during a Veterans Day parade in Sacramento on Nov. 11, 2023. Photo by Rich Pedroncelli, AP Photo

State lawmakers are trying once again to pass legislation that would exempt some California veterans from paying taxes on their military retirement incomes

As CalMatters’ Sameea Kamal explains, Assemblymember James Ramos, a San Bernardino Democrat, has proposed (for a third time) a measure that would enable veterans making under $125,000 a year to exempt up to $20,000 of their federal pensions. Sen. Kelly Seyarto, a Murrieta Republican, has a similar bill in the Senate. 

Supporters argue that the tax break will help veterans stay and work in California. About 1.4 million veterans live in the state, but many leave due to the cost of living, according to the president of the San Diego Military Advisory Council. From 2000 to 2022, California’s retired military population dropped from 195,000 to just over 141,000, or nearly 28%.

But the tax break might not be enough to keep retirees in California even if it becomes law, reports the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office. A Senate bill analysis also argues that the exemption could set a precedent “for other commendable professions,” which “may lead to a slippery slope … eroding the income tax base.”

Read more here.

And lastly: Immigration arrests on college campuses

An over-the-shoulder photo of a student protestor waving a small Mexican flag over a crowd of students protesting on a college campus. The students are standing around in a student plaza area with trees all around them as they listen to a speech,
A student waves a Mexican flag while participating in an anti-deportation protest at Sacramento State University in Sacramento on Feb. 12, 2025. Photo by Fred Greaves for CalMatters

Under President Donald Trump’s administration, immigration enforcement agents are now allowed to make arrests at schools and other “sensitive locations.” With an estimated 100,000 college students living in California without permanent legal status, students are calling on colleges to do more to shield campuses from immigration enforcement. Find out more from Delilah Brumer of CalMatters’ College Journalism Network.



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Musk’s DOGE targets nearly two dozen CA environmental offices for closure // Los Angeles Times

Tesla’s steep fall from CA’s green darling to hated target of protests // Los Angeles Times

Are Republicans cooling on attaching strings to CA wildfire aid? // San Francisco Chronicle

Newsom sends prepaid phones, aka ‘burners,’ to tech CEOs // Politico

CA wants to send more hazardous waste to local landfills // San Francisco Chronicle

Edison’s power lines were under strain 14 hours before Eaton Fire // The New York Times

These CA coastal cities face heightened flood danger from tsunami, data show // Los Angeles Times

Madera Community Hospital is reopening after two-year closure // The Fresno Bee

Santa Clara County leaders slam San Jose Mayor’s plan to arrest homeless residents // The Mercury News

Two Bay Area cities created a program to help undocumented immigrants. It might instead help ICE target them // San Francisco Chronicle