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Tahoe stewardship council highlights visitor training and a ‘three‑E’ approach to manage growing use

Nevada Legislature — Natural Resources Committee (informational hearing) · April 11, 2026

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Summary

Presenters told a Nevada committee that the Lake Tahoe Destination Stewardship Council coordinates cross‑jurisdiction work, runs an online Destination Champion training taken by nearly 200 people, and that the U.S. Forest Service favors a management framework of education, engineering and enforcement to keep recreation sustainable.

The Lake Tahoe Destination Stewardship Council and federal land managers told a Nevada legislative committee that stronger coordination and training are needed to manage rising visitor pressure across the basin.

A presenter for the council described a free online Destination Champion customer‑service training—about 1 hour and 15 minutes long—that nearly 200 people had completed. The council, the presenter said, meets monthly and convenes action teams that bring a wide range of stakeholders together to align messaging and on‑the‑ground stewardship activities.

"The goal is to better manage the tourists that come here," the presenter said, adding the council is focused on stewardship rather than increasing visitation.

Daniel Cressy, public services officer for the Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit of the U.S. Forest Service, told the committee that most land in the basin is publicly owned and managed, and that the Forest Service relies on public–private partnerships and long‑term special use authorizations to provide services and leverage funding.

Cressy summarized the agency's operational framework as "education, engineering, and enforcement," saying education and engineered site design should make responsible behavior obvious and that enforcement complements those efforts.

Committee members queried how residents are represented in council work and whether the council is subject to public‑meeting laws. Devin Middlebrook, speaking for TRPA, said the council is a self‑formed collaborative body with a charter and work plan, not an official government agency with statutory noticing requirements; he said local jurisdictions and action teams bring broader public input and that founding documents are available on stewardshiptahoe.org.

Why it matters: Lake Tahoe spans two states and multiple counties. Presenters framed the council as a practical coordination mechanism to align visitor messaging, operations and local partners so that infrastructure and enforcement can work together to protect environmental values and resident quality of life.

What's next: The council continues monthly meetings and action‑team work; speakers asked the Legislature to consider how to enable better local funding and cross‑jurisdiction data to guide decisions.