Chapter 12Special Water Quality Provisions
Section § 13950
This section of the law states that if a district in the Lake Tahoe Basin sets up a complete sewer system and treatment facilities, any old waste disposal methods like cesspools must stop because they're considered a public nuisance. People in that area have to connect their buildings to the new sewer system within 90 days of when it's ready.
Section § 13951
This law mandates that, starting January 1, 1972, all waste in the Lake Tahoe watershed must go into a sewer system with proper treatment facilities. The only exception is for waste placed in a holding tank that will be transported to such facilities. Solid waste refuse is not included in this restriction.
Using cesspools, septic tanks, or similar systems for waste disposal within the Lake Tahoe watershed is considered a public nuisance unless allowed by the specified conditions in this section. Buildings that discharge waste against these rules are also a public nuisance, and legal action can be taken to prevent their occupancy.
The rule doesn't apply if it's determined by the Lahontan regional board that the use of septic tanks or cesspools in certain areas will not harm Lake Tahoe's waters and that adding sewers would damage the environment. It also excludes the Fallen Leaf Lake watershed under specific conditions. This section does not override Section 13950.
Section § 13952
Even though other sections might say otherwise, this law allows for a special project to treat and reuse waste water from outside the Lake Tahoe Basin for good purposes within the Basin. This can only happen through a pilot project that shows it’s safe and viable. The project needs approval from the Lahontan regional board and must demonstrate that it won’t harm Lake Tahoe's water quality. All projects must be submitted before January 1, 1984, for consideration and need a minimum 10-year operation plan. Approval can come with conditions like project size, and the board can stop or suspend the project if necessary.
Section § 13952.1
This law allows the South Tahoe Public Utility District to use recycled water to protect its Luther Pass pump station from a catastrophic fire. To do this, three conditions must be met: an engineering report must be submitted to relevant authorities, authorization for the water's use in specific areas must be granted by these authorities along with the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, and the fire incident commander must approve the water's use at the site. A 'catastrophic fire' is a situation that poses serious threats to life, property, and the environment, where all other fire-fighting methods have failed.
Section § 13952.5
This law emphasizes the importance of preserving Lake Tahoe by clarifying who has the authority to regulate the handling of treated sewage in the area. The Lahontan regional board is specifically given the exclusive power to set rules for waste discharge, storage, and disposal of treated sewage transported out of the Lake Tahoe watershed to Alpine County. However, their decisions can still be reviewed according to certain provisions.