It is probably a rookie
mistake. But only time will tell. Rob was sworn in recently as the newest board
member of the Al Tahoe Forest Homes Association. They either saw his immense talent, or they
just needed a warm body. I’d like to
think it was his talent. He does have
the ability to keep a cool head when others are losing theirs. (And, yeah I am kind of talking about
myself.)
This little neighborhood here in Tahoe,
consisting of 116 lots/homes, has a decades old homeowners association. There
are many unique things about this neighborhood, and preserving the integrity
and character of it, is the purpose of this organization. For a whopping $30 in annual dues, (yes, a
year,) this group works to protect an area with many old cabins dating from the
20s and 30s, towering pine trees, and home lots that are very large.
Here, it
is common for cabins to be passed down through generations of the same
family. Many of the people we meet while
walking the dog tell us that they have been coming up here, to the same cabin
since they were children. And, some of
these people are pretty darn old.
To the credit of this
organization, they have stopped people from sub-dividing their lots and
preventing more homes from being built closer together, had roads built around large pine trees rather than having them cut down, and they
took care of snow plow damage to the many gigantic trees that line the streets.
The board consists of many
interesting people: an interior
designer, two police officers- one active and one retired, (Rob,) an
accountant, a landscape architect, just to name a few. The parliamentary procedures they follow during
meetings seem overly formal while sitting around a cozy kitchen table in a 1938
cabin.
With the hot real estate
market in South Lake Tahoe, the board realizes that there aren’t enough specific
stipulations in the CC and R’s (Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions,) about how large of a house could potentially be build
in this historic neighborhood. It has
become common for the city to allow developers to come in and build 6,000+
square feet, multiple bedroom homes that are, in reality used as income
rental properties. The year-round neighbors then contend with 25
or more people having parties in these huge houses, especially during ski
season, and of course all summer long. The Tahoe Regional Planning Association stipulates that you can only cover 30% of your lot, for 'environmental reasons.' This all sounds well and good for an area that prides itself on Keeping Tahoe Blue and being environmentally aware of preserving Tahoe, except when you find out that you can BUY extra coverage. Rather hypocritical, I'd say. That explains why they allowed the house below to be built. It literally covers almost the entire lot.
Look at the poor little cozy house on the right, that now has this towering house right on top of it. This is what we DON'T want to happen in the Al Tahoe Forest Homes Association neighborhood. |
So, the board wants to put a
stipulation into the by-laws that limits the size a house can be to 3,000 feet, and form a
review committee so that houses in this neighborhood retain the rustic Tahoe
look.
With Rob as a board member,
we are getting to know more neighbors here, than we know at home. I think
that’s a good thing!
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