A new study shows how Lake Tahoe could serve as a mammoth reservoir that could alleviate California's chronic water shortage without tarnishing the lake's world - its famous beauty.
The planned Lake Tahoe West Renaturation Project to restore forests, meadows, streams and wildlife habitat. The project is based on a collaboration between the U.S. Forest Service, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife and the University of California, Davis, led by the Sierra Club, California State University, San Diego, the Sierra Nevada Board of Regents and other stakeholders, as well as the states and communities of the Bay Area and Northern California. The project, which is expected to be completed by 2019, provides a collaborative framework for restoring water quality, wildlife, forest, stream and forest in the South Bay Area of Southern California's largest lake and its major watersheds, according to a press release from the project's lead author, Dr. David H. Schulman, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at UC Davis School of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences and co-author of a report on the study. Lake - to - Lake Water Flow and Water Management in South Lake Sierra California is a multi-stakeholder initiative convened by a coalition of local, state, federal, local, and state agencies, as well as private stakeholders.
The mission of the Tahoe FCD is to promote sustainable water management in the Sierra California South Sea by providing stakeholders with leadership and innovative environmental services.
Water damage to South Lake Tahoe, which causes water damage in the South Sea and the Southern Bay of Sierra California, is being handled by the US Geological Survey (USGS) and the California Department of Water Resources (CDR). It is available in several areas in Nevada and California, including the San Joaquin Valley, the Sierra Nevada and parts of California's Central Valley and Central Bay.
The Foresthill area has a 100-mile network of hiking trails, and of course there is always plenty of water in the area for hiking, camping, fishing and other outdoor activities, as well as a variety of other recreational activities. The Forest Hill area has over 100 miles of trails that can be visited and of course there is always plenty to eat, relax, ski, kayak, canoe, mountain bike, rock climbing, hiking and much more.
On February 26, 2018, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CADWR) found a total of 1.5 million cubic feet of water in South Lake Tahoe California.

Tahoe RCD purchased the water for the project with funding from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CADWR) and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). This project was made possible by a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) through the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC).
The Upper Truckee River (UTR), which drains more than 56 square miles and provides more than 80 percent of the water supply to South Lake Tahoe, is located in the southern part of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, about 30 miles east of Tahoes Lake. Johnson Meadow is located within the floodplain of U TRT and was a privately owned meadow prior to the takeover by Tahoe RCD.
The northern end of Lake Tahoe includes all major tributaries of the Truckee River in California, including its main source in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Only one of these lakes flows into the Pyramid Lake of Reno, and it has a maximum flow rate of about 1,000 cubic feet per second (cubic meters per minute) of water.
The extent of the spring water of South Lake Tahoe is known as the Upper Truckee River, and you can see travel reports and photos from this blog post on the website of the North Shore Water Quality Management District. The extent or "spring water" of North Lake Sierra Lake in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, the upper part of which is featured in travel reports and photo blog entries. This headwaters of southern Lake Reno and northern Lake Nevada can also be known by the name of its tributaries, the Upper Tru Creeks: South Shore River.

UTR is owned by the North Shore Water Quality Management District and the California Tahoe Conservancy, which owns the water rights to the Upper Truckee River and its tributaries. The area connecting Sacramento, California, with Carson City, Nevada, is served by South Lake Tahoes. South Shore Airport, the largest airport in the state of Nevada, is owned and operated by the Sierra Nevada Water Conservation District of California. It serves general aviation, although scheduled air traffic is not possible.
Johnson Meadow is located on the west side of South Lake Tahoe, north of the north shore. Johnson is conveniently located on 89N, which is directly on the lake and only a few hundred meters from the shores of North Tahoe Lake and its tributaries.