STEM Discovery Night returns to South Lake Tahoe

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. — South Lake Tahoe families are invited to spend an evening exploring science, technology, engineering, and math at STEM Discovery Night, a free community event hosted by Lake Tahoe Community College and Lake Tahoe Unified School District. The event takes place on Friday, May 8, from 5:30 to 8 p.m. in the multi-purpose room at South Tahoe Middle School.

Now in its third year, STEM Discovery Night is open to students in kindergarten through 12th grade and their families. The evening features hands-on tinkering stations, robotics demonstrations, interactive exhibits, and a pop-up “Discovery Museum” experience. Food trucks will be on site, and raffle prizes will be given away throughout the night.

STEM Discovery Night is returning Friday, May 8, from 5:30 to 8 p.m
Provided / LTCC

The event is a collaborative effort between LTCC’s TRiO, Hispanic Serving Institution and Dual Enrollment programs, Dr. Jamie Orr, The Marcella Foundation, and LTUSD’s CTE and Science Departments.

“STEM Discovery Night started as a shared vision among many of us, to plant a seed of curiosity and a love for learning in our students and families,” said Gladys Aguilar, Director of TRiO Programs at LTCC. “We are incredibly proud to bring this event to our community and create a space where science, exploration, and discovery can come to life.”

Admission is free and open to the public. The Slice Shack and Limonada will be on-site food vendors for the evening.

Tahoe Rim Trail Association launches ‘Confidence Starts Here’ campaign to support youth backcountry camps

STATELINE, Nev. — The Tahoe Rim Trail Association (TRTA) has launched the Confidence Starts Here Campaign, a two-month community fundraising effort to support its Youth Backcountry Camps (YBCC), immersive four-day backpacking experiences that help teens build confidence, leadership skills, meaningful connections, and a lifelong relationship with the outdoors.

Due to a funding gap caused by shifting priorities from longtime funders, the TRTA seeks to raise $90,000 to close the gap. Thanks to the generosity of some key supporters, up to $20,000 in donations will be matched dollar for dollar, giving you the opportunity to double your impact.

“Youth Backcountry Camps give teens something increasingly rare: the chance to step away from screens, meet real challenges, build lasting friendships, and discover what they are capable of,” said Mark Hassett, Youth Programs Manager at the Tahoe Rim Trail Association. “When a young person gains confidence in the backcountry, they carry that into school, relationships, work, and their future. That is why this program matters so deeply.”

Youth Backcountry Camps serve teens ages 12–17 through guided, multi-day trips on the Tahoe Rim Trail led by experienced outdoor educators. Participants learn navigation, camp cooking, teamwork, communication, Leave No Trace principles, and stewardship values while traveling through the Tahoe backcountry.

The program also prioritizes access. Community support helps fund scholarships, reduced program fees, shared gear, and partnerships with schools and community organizations so more youth can participate regardless of financial barriers.

In 2025, the program served 142 campers across 14 camps, with 90% of participants reporting an increased connection to nature and community and 71% attending at no cost to their families.

“The outdoors can be one of the most powerful classrooms a young person ever experiences,” Hassett said. “This campaign is about making sure more youth have this opportunity for the years to come. 2026 marks 19 years of this program. There have been hundreds of youth that have gotten to experience these incredible camps, and we want to continue to provide these experiences as there are many who live in Tahoe’s backyard and still face barriers to enjoying the trails that the TRTA and all of its volunteers have worked tirelessly to build and maintain.”

Community members can learn more and donate at tahoerimtrail.org/support-ybcc.

Sky Tavern to host MAYDAY Festival on May 30; launches new bike memberships, shuttle program

RENO, Nev. – Sky Tavern is kicking off the summer season with the return of its highly anticipated MAYDAY Festival on May 30, alongside the launch of new community-powered bike park memberships and an expanded shuttle program—marking a major step forward in access, progression, and sustainability for Northern Nevada’s mountain bike and outdoor community.

MAYDAY Festival signals the start of summer at Sky Tavern, bringing together riders, families, and outdoor enthusiasts for a community celebration of bikes, vendors, youth skills workshops, live music, food and beverage offerings, and a zip line in partnership with Project Discovery. MAYDAY highlights the spirit of connection and progression that defines Sky Tavern’s bike park.

“This festival represents Why We Sky—community, progression, and getting outside together,” said Rick Reed, marketing and bike park manager. “It’s the perfect way to kick off the summer season while creating awareness of our offerings to the community.”

MAYDAY Festival begins at 10 a.m. and runs until 4 p.m. Admission is on sale now via the Sky Tavern website. Kids under 12 are free. Proceeds go to community-powered trails and programs. New this season, Sky Tavern is launching a tiered bike membership program designed to directly support trail maintenance and programming. These memberships provide riders with meaningful ways to invest in the future of the bike park while unlocking access benefits—including shuttle privileges, early access opportunities, and exclusive community perks.

Built on a “community-powered trails” model, the memberships reinforce Sky Tavern’s mission as a nonprofit organization, where the community plays a critical role in sustaining and expanding trail access for all.

In partnership with the U.S. Forest Service, Sky Tavern is officially launching its summer shuttle program, offering riders easier access to the mountain’s growing trail network. The shuttle is designed to enhance the overall riding experience, reduce barriers to entry, and increase lap capacity for riders of all abilities—from beginners to advanced. The shuttle program integrates with membership offerings, creating a seamless experience for riders looking to maximize their time on the mountain.

With expanded programming and shuttles, Sky Tavern is poised for its most impactful bike park season yet. The Riders in the Sky skills clinics program begins in June with more youth and adult offerings than ever.

For more information on Sky Tavern Bike Park and MAYDAY Festival, visit www.skytavern.org.

Free public tours: South Tahoe Public Utility District Wastewater Treatment Plant

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. – The South Tahoe Public Utility District (District) is offering free public tours of its wastewater treatment plant on Wednesday, May 20, 2026, at 10 a.m., 1 p.m., and 5 p.m. These one-hour tours give residents a behind-the-scenes look at how the facility operates and the essential role it plays in protecting Lake Tahoe’s environment.

Participants will tour the treatment plant and learn how wastewater is cleaned and safely reused. Tours are free, but advance registration is required. Space is limited to 20 participants per tour and is available on a first-come, first-served basis. To register, visit stpud.us/events or sign up directly at: www.stpud.us/2026-05-20-public-waste-water-treatment-plant-tours.

Tours will begin in the South Tahoe Public Utility District Board Room, located at 1275 Meadow Crest Drive in South Lake Tahoe.

“We don’t often get to show people what happens after they turn on the tap or flush the drain,” said Aaron Buckman, Manager of Plant Operations. “These tours are a great way for our community to see firsthand the work that goes into treating wastewater and protecting the lake we all depend on.”

For more information about the District’s wastewater treatment plant, visit www.stpud.us/events.

Lack of funding significantly reduced 2025 aerial forest surveys

LAKE TAHOE, Calif./Nev. – An annual aerial survey that monitors forest health was significantly reduced in 2025 due to a lack of funding, resulting in many portions of California forests, including the Tahoe area, not being included.

Since 2006, the U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region’s Aerial Survey Program has flown over California forests every year to observe and document tree mortality, defoliation, and other damage.

These annual estimates capture tree mortality patterns and trends, which researchers and foresters use to monitor ecosystem disturbances often caused by insects and disease. The information is also important for fire behavior forecasting.

While the surveys typically cover large swaths of California landscape and a majority of national forests in California, including the Tahoe National Forest and the Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit, 2025’s survey was significantly limited to Southern California forests and the far southern Sierra Nevada. The summary report states surveys were conducted in areas where 2025 drought conditions were most severe.

Aerial Survey Program Manager Jeffrey Moore says that a temporary gap like this could create a localized data void and potentially make it harder to identify immediate, fine-grained forest health changes for that year.

However, Moore adds, “The long-term integrity of our forest health monitoring remains strong. Our robust dataset, built over more than three decades, combined with established best practices for data analysis, allow us to track significant trends and understand the broader dynamics of forest health.”

The program does not yet have a finalized budget for the 2026 aerial surveys, but is actively planning to conduct them, including in the Tahoe Basin and surrounding areas, once funding is allocated.

Some general trends observed over the years of monitoring include elevated tree mortality across the region since 2016, when an exceptionally prolonged drought occurred. The program has also observed mortality from another, shorter-duration drought between 2020 and 2022, which is primarily concentrated in the central Sierra Nevada range and the northern interior of the state.


Do you have thoughts on this topic? Tell us your opinion at https://www.tahoedailytribune.com/submissions/letter-to-the-editor/


Fox & Hound BBQ Sauces earn national recognition across 3 major competitions

STATELINE, Nev. — Fox & Hound Smokehouse Grill & Bar, a longtime Lake Tahoe staple, is gaining national attention beyond the restaurant with its line of housemade BBQ sauces—earning top honors across three of the country’s most respected barbecue competitions in 2026.

Fox & Hound BBQ sauces
Rob Galloway / Tahoe Daily Tribune

The Fox & Hound BBQ sauce lineup—developed and served daily at the restaurant—was recognized across multiple categories, highlighting the range and versatility of the brand’s flavors:

  • High Altitude Heat – 2nd Place (Silver) at the National Barbecue & Grilling Association (NBBQA) Awards of Excellence, held in Nashville, TN, with over 600 entries nationwide
  • Mountain-Style Vinegar – 4th Place at the American Royal World Series of Barbecue Sauce Contest, the largest sauce competition in the world.
  • Lake Level Mild – Top 10 Finish (9th Place) at the Sauces of Honor Awards, judged on real smoked pork and competing against more than 550 entries nationwide.

“These sauces weren’t created for competition—they were built in a working smokehouse,” said Matt Grime, owner of Fox & Hound. “Every one of them is used daily on the meats we serve our guests. The awards are a great validation of what we’ve been doing for years.”

Unlike many competition sauces, Fox & Hound’s lineup was developed in a high-volume restaurant kitchen and refined through real guest feedback. Each flavor is designed to pair with specific meats:

  • High Altitude Heat — a bold chipotle-habanero sauce served alongside tri-tip
  • Mountain-Style Vinegar — a tangy, Carolina-inspired sauce used on pulled pork
  • Lake Level Mild — a sweet and smoky sauce featured on ribs

All sauces are made with clean ingredients and are gluten-free, with no high-fructose corn syrup, MSG, or artificial preservatives.

With growing demand, Fox & Hound BBQ Sauces are now expanding into retail. Bottles are currently available at select South Lake Tahoe locations including The Cork & More, Welcome Home Shoppe, Langenfeld Ace Hardware, South Lake Tahoe Ace Hardware, La Mexicana Tahoe Market, and Plaza Tapatia Market on Herbert Avenue. The sauces are also available at Armando & Sons Butcher Shop in Reno, with additional placements continuing to roll out.

Fox & Hound Smokehouse Grill & Bar has been serving the Lake Tahoe community since 1991 and remains the foundation of the brand, where guests can experience the sauces exactly as they’re intended—paired with smoked meats straight from the kitchen.

Customers can also purchase sauces online at:
www.FoxAndHoundBBQSauce.com

Know Your Candidates: Experience vs Political Influence (Opinion)

El Dorado County’s Election is right around the corner (June 2nd) and mail-in ballots were distributed May 4th! While there are a few contested races, I would like to turn your attention to one with significant impacts on the County’s finances: Treasurer-Tax Collector. The Treasurer-Tax Collector’s Office is responsible for issuing business licenses, collecting property taxes, and managing a $1.1B investment portfolio. The elected candidate will direct these operations and manage some 25 personnel. Let’s take a closer look at the two candidates on the ballot! 

Sean Coppola is a Certified Treasury Professional and your current Treasurer-Tax Collector, who was unanimously appointed by the County Board of Supervisors following his predecessor’s retirement. Prior to this role he served as Assistant Treasurer-Tax Collector and oversaw 200 staff as Controller for a nationwide property management firm. Mr. Coppola is endorsed by individuals such as previous Treasurer-Tax Collector K.E. Coleman, former Sheriff John D’Agostini, three County Supervisors, and fellow foothill County Treasurer-Tax Collectors. 

Corey Leikauf is currently an Administrative Analyst II in the Auditor-Controller’s Office. His prior work experience includes serving as an auditor for Deloitte and Eide Bailly but does not appear to have any experience leading departments. Mr. Leikauf is endorsed by individuals such as Assembly Member Heather Hadwick, former state legislators Ted and Beth Gaines, and various law enforcement officials.  

At a glance, the candidates have similar backgrounds – both were raised in El Dorado County and are in their early 30’s – though each candidate has distinct advantages in this race. Mr. Coppola is an incumbent with experience managing the Office and was mentored by our previous Treasurer-Tax Collector. Mr. Leikauf is Sheriff Leikauf’s son and inherently leverages his father’s political influence within the County.  

This presents a conflict where voters cannot be certain that the supporters behind Mr. Leikauf’s campaign truly acknowledge him as the most qualified candidate, or if they are endorsing him due to their relationships with the Sheriff. Considering the Sheriff is arguably the County’s most influential elected official, others may stay silent rather than risk the political fallout of endorsing his son’s opponent. 

Voters should also be concerned with the integrity of a candidate that is campaigning on “trust” and “accountability”, when Mr. Leikauf’s candidate statement lists him as “Deputy Auditor-Controller”. No such title exists within County government; he is a staff-level analyst. This is a disingenuous political tactic aimed at deceiving voters into believing that he has more experience when he is actually far less qualified than Mr. Coppola. When asked during the March El Dorado County GOP meeting, Mr. Leikauf had no concerns to offer about the performance of the current Treasurer-Tax Collector’s Office. This left me suspicious of his personal motivations. 

The people of El Dorado County deserve a Treasurer-Tax Collector that is elected on merit, not family connections and misleading voters. Please consider voting for Sean Coppola this June to ensure that El Dorado County’s finances are managed with experience and integrity, and to lead this great County towards a prosperous future.  

Lane Closures on Kingsbury Grade May 6 to finalize drainage repairs

CARSON CITY, Nev. – Single lane closures with travel delays will be in place May 6 on Kingsbury Grade (State Route 207) near the Carson Valley as the Nevada Department of Transportation finalizes replacement of drainage culverts.

One lane will be closed on the Carson Valley side of Kingsbury Grade, approximately one mile up from Foothill Road between 6 a.m.-6 p.m. May 6. While the majority of delays will be moderate, motorists should anticipate up to 30-minute travel delays as traffic flaggers alternate directions of traffic through the work zone.

Crews will place final paving over sections of roadway where aging drainage culverts were replaced earlier this year.

Motorists should leave extra time when traveling through the work zone, and are reminded to drive safely and follow all traffic signage.

Road work schedules are subject to change based on weather and other factors.

Additional state highway information is available at dot.nv.gov or by calling (775) 888-7000. For the latest state highway conditions, visit nvroads.com or call 511 before driving. Also follow @NevadaDOTReno on X for traffic and project updates in northern Nevada, and @nevadadot on X, Facebook, and Instagram for updates from across the state.

Emerald Bay State Park voted Best State Park for Water Activities

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. – California State Parks Foundation released the results of the second annual “Best of California’s State Parks.” This poll highlights state parks beloved for hiking, camping, spectacular views, wildflowers, family-friendly adventures, and more. This year’s poll also features two new categories — “Best State Park for Water Activities” and “Best State Park for Hidden Gem Experiences.”

This year, California State Parks Foundation invited its members, supporters, and the public to nominate and vote on their favorite parks across 12 categories. Over 2,000 people participated in the process. Many of the survey participants also sent in photos and shared their personal stories and memories about why these parks are special. 

“The ‘Best of California’s State Parks‘ poll highlights the deep connection that people have to our parks,” said Rachel Norton, Executive Director of California State Parks Foundation. “These places represent the incredible diversity of experiences we can find in our state parks, from exploring the coast to learning about our history. We hope Californians will use the ‘Best of California’s State Parks‘ poll results to get inspired to get outdoors with family and friends.”

This year’s winners and honorable mentions include parks that stretch across 24 counties in California. It includes a wide range of parks, including urban, desert, coastal, woodland, and historic parks, highlighting the diversity of the system.

The California state park system includes 280 state parks and growing, over 340 miles of coastline, 970 miles of lake and river frontage, 15,000 campsites, 5,200 miles of trails, more than 3,000 historic buildings, and more than 11,000 known prehistoric and historic archaeological sites. 

The winners of the 2026 “Best of California’s State Parks” poll include:

  • Best State Park for Camping
    • Winner: Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park (Monterey County)
    • Honorable Mention: Anza-Borrego Desert State Park (Imperial, Riverside, and San Diego Counties)
    • Honorable Mention: Calaveras Big Trees State Park (Calaveras and Tuolumne Counties)
  • Best State Park for Hiking
    • Winner: Big Basin Redwoods State Park (San Mateo and Santa Cruz Counties)
    • Honorable Mention: Jack London State Historic Park (Sonoma County)
    • Honorable Mention: Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park (Humboldt and Del Norte Counties)
  • Best State Park for Spectacular Views
    • Winner: Mount Tamalpais State Park (Marin County)
    • Honorable Mention: Point Lobos State Natural Reserve (Monterey County)
    • Honorable Mention: Crystal Cove State Park (Orange County)
  • Best State Park for Birdwatching
    • Winner: Morro Bay State Park (San Luis Obispo County)
    • Honorable Mention: Humboldt Lagoons State Park (Humboldt County)
    • Honorable Mention: Año Nuevo State Park (San Mateo County)
  • Best State Park for Wildflowers
    • Winner: Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve State Natural Reserve (Los Angeles County)
    • Honorable Mention: Anza-Borrego Desert State Park (Imperial, Riverside, and San Diego Counties)
    • Honorable Mention: Sugarloaf Ridge State Park (Sonoma and Napa Counties)
  • Best State Park for Family-Friendly Adventures
    • Winner: Angel Island State Park (Marin County)
    • Honorable Mention: Railtown 1897 State Historic Park (Tuolumne County)
    • Honorable Mention: Indian Grinding Rock State Historic Park (Amador County)
  • Best State Park for Day Trips
    • Winner: Point Lobos State Natural Reserve (Monterey County)
    • Honorable Mention: Jack London State Historic Park (Sonoma County)
    • Honorable Mention: Angel Island State Park (Marin County)
  • Best State Park for Beaches
    • Winner: Half Moon Bay State Beach (San Mateo County)
    • Honorable Mention: Asilomar State Beach (Monterey County)
    • Honorable Mention: Crystal Cove State Park (Orange County)
  • Best State Park for Learning About History
    • Winner: Bodie State Historic Park (Mono County)
    • Honorable Mention: Jack London State Historic Park (Sonoma County)
    • Honorable Mention: Indian Grinding Rock State Historic Park (Amador County)
  • Best State Park for Dog-Friendly Adventures
    • Winner: Folsom Lake State Recreation Area (El Dorado, Placer, and Sacramento Counties)
    • Honorable Mention: Leo Carrillo State Park (Los Angeles and Ventura Counties)
    • Honorable Mention: Candlestick Point State Recreation Area (San Francisco County)
  • Best State Park for Water Activities
    • Winner: Emerald Bay State Park (El Dorado County) 
    • Honorable Mention: Folsom Lake State Recreation Area (El Dorado, Placer, and Sacramento Counties)
    • Honorable Mention: Clear Lake State Park (Lake County)
  • Best State Park Hidden Gem
    • Winner: Sugarloaf Ridge State Park (Sonoma and Napa Counties)
    • Honorable Mention: Bodie State Historic Park (Mono County)
    • Honorable Mention: China Camp State Park (Marin County)

Wildfire awareness month in Lake Tahoe

LAKE TAHOE, Calif./Nev. – As May marks Wildfire Awareness Month, agencies and partners across the Lake Tahoe Basin are encouraging residents and visitors to take meaningful steps now to reduce wildfire risk before the season begins.

Building on the “Get Defensive” campaign, this year’s focus is on taking early, consistent action at home and across the community to strengthen wildfire resilience Basin-wide.

“Wildfire is a natural part of this landscape,” said Annabelle Monti, Tahoe Fire and Fuels Team Program Manager. “The work we do ahead of time helps protect lives, property, and the forests that make Tahoe home.”

The Lake Tahoe Basin’s forests and communities are closely connected, meaning wildfire risk is shared across everyone. Ongoing forest health projects are reducing risk across the landscape, but individual actions from homeowners remain a critical part of the solution.

What You Can Do

Residents are encouraged to take the following steps:

  • Maintain defensible space around structures (0-100 feet)
  • Reduce ember risks by keeping roofs, gutters, and vents clear
  • Prepare for evacuation, including knowing routes and having a plan
  • Sign up for emergency alerts to receive real-time information

“Prepared homes and neighborhoods make a difference,” said Isaac Powning, Tahoe Fire and Fuels Team Incident Commander. “When communities take action together, it strengthens our collective ability to live with wildfire.”

Sign up for Emergency Alerts

During a wildfire, conditions can change quickly. Emergency alerts provide critical, real-time information about evacuations and safety. To register, visit the link for your county:

Wildfire resilience in the Tahoe Basin depends on shared effort. From landscape-scale forest management to individual actions at home, each step contributes to a more prepared and resilient community.

Learn More Residents can find resources, tips, and updates at: www.tahoelivingwithfire.com

Upcoming Events

There are many events occurring around the Tahoe Basin to recognize and support wildfire awareness:

  • 5/5, 6-7:30 p.m.: Firewise Workshop Tahoe City
  • 5/6, 8-10:30 a.m.: Cuppa Tahoe
  • 5/9, 9-11 a.m.: Freel Perk Café
  • 5/12, 8:30-10:30 a.m., Clyde’s Coffee
  • 5/14, 9:30-11:30 a.m.: Bearry Sweet
  • 5/16, 9-11 a.m.: Tahoe House Bakery
  • 5/19, 3-5 p.m.: Tahoma Market & Deli
  • 5/30, 10-2 p.m.: Wildfire Safety Expo SLT
  • 5/31, 12-2 p.m.: Aspen Hollow Nursery
  • 6/4, 8:30-1 p.m.: Tahoe City Farmers Market
  • 6/6, 11-2 p.m.: North Tahoe Community Day
  • 6/18, 11-1 p.m.: Tree House Café

Constructin to begin on East Shore Trail parking, safety improvements

STATELINE, Nev.   The Tahoe Transportation District (TTD) is advancing the next phase of coordinated East Shore Trail Parking improvements with construction set to begin in May 2026 on the SR 28 North Parking Project (Phase 2 of the Tunnel Creek Parking Project), near Incline Village, Nev. The project is part of the East Shore Trail expansion, and a broader regional effort to improve safety, enhance recreational access, and better manage parking along the SR 28 corridor. 

The project is being delivered in partnership with the Tahoe Fund, Nevada Department of Transportation, Washoe County, Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, Nevada Division of State Lands, Nevada Division of State Parks, and other regional partners. 

The project will provide 38 paid parking spaces immediately north of the existing 90-space paid parking area at the East Shore Trailhead located on SR 28 in Incline Village. In addition, the project includes a public transit shelter on SR 28 just north of Lakeshore Drive for southbound transit passengers. Finally, the project includes environmental restoration of an eroded shoulder area on the west side of SR 28 known as Rocky Point to protect Lake Tahoe’s clarity. 

“This is another important step in a larger, coordinated effort along the East Shore,” said Jim Marino, Executive Director of the Tahoe Transportation District. “By expanding and improving parking management in key recreation areas, we are reducing congestion, improving safety, and supporting sustainable access to Lake Tahoe as we prepare for the eventual construction of new sections of the East Shore Trail.” 

TTD awarded the construction contract to F.W. Carson Company of Incline Village, Nevada, a local contractor with extensive experience delivering transportation and infrastructure projects in the Tahoe Basin. 

“This moment is years in the making,” said Amy Berry, CEO of the Tahoe Fund. “Thanks to the generosity of our donors and the hard work of our agency partners, we’re thrilled to see these first steps in what will eventually be the expansion of the East Shore Trail.” 

The East Shore Trail Parking Expansion Project builds on ongoing regional parking and mobility improvements designed to address high seasonal visitation and better manage limited capacity in one of the most heavily used recreation corridors in the Tahoe Basin. 

As part of this broader strategy, TTD is working with the USDA Forest Service Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit on additional improvements to parking areas which are planned for opening in Spring 2026, including: 

  • Chimney Beach (seasonal paid parking beginning June 1) 
  • Secret Harbor (seasonal paid parking also beginning June 1) 
  • Spooner Mobility Hub (construction beginning in May) 

Once open, the Chimney Beach Trailhead will provide approximately 130 parking spaces in conjunction with parking enforcement and removal of roadside parking spaces to improve safety along the SR 28 corridor. The Secret Harbor Trailhead has approximately 30 spaces. Eventually, both parking areas will offer connections to the Tahoe East Shore Trail, which is currently in design. 

These coordinated efforts are intended to reduce unsafe roadside parking, improve emergency vehicle access, prevent water quality impacts from compacted road shoulders, and encourage the use of transit, biking, and other alternative transportation options along SR 28. 

Stay informed and plan ahead 
Construction activity and visitor impacts will vary throughout the season. The public is strongly encouraged to sign up for project updates and alerts at: SR28projects@tahoetransportation.org 

TTD will continue coordinating with F.W. Carson Company and partner agencies to provide construction updates as the project moves forward at www.tahoetransportation.org/projects/sr-28-north-parking-project/  

For details on Tahoe Transportation District and its current projects, visit www.TahoeTransportation.org or call (775) 589-5500.   

Going all-in with professional poker player Lexy Gavin-Mather: Building a legacy in a male-dominated industry

Lexy Gavin-Mather was recently in Lake Tahoe for the WSOP Circuit tournament
Provided/Lexy Gavin-Mather

STATELINE, Nev. – In the poker world, dominated by 95% men, Lexy Gavin-Mather is many things – a coach, an author, a vlogger, and a professional poker player who travels the world and has amassed over $2 million in combined winnings from both tournaments and cash games. To think she almost became a lawyer instead is mystifying. 

When Gavin-Mather was in college, she had plans to pursue law school. As fate would have it, she took an interest in online poker.

“It was my junior year in college,” recalled Gavin-Mather. “I started to have success early online. Once I graduated from college, I was at this crossroads: ‘Do I go the law school route and have a very respectable, but conventional life or do I see where poker can take me?'”

Gavin-Mather took the road less traveled, continuing online poker with high hopes of having lasting success.

“Poker is very much a game of skill, but of course there’s an element of luck,” said Gavin-Mather as she touched on the success in her early career being both a good and bad thing. Riding the high of a winning streak is great until poker variance knocks you off the summit.

“Poker is a volume game and you have ups and downs,” said Gavin-Mather. “It quickly turned. I realized it is not that easy, and I really need to study this game and become a little more disciplined with my bank roll management.”

Gavin-Mather hit the books and studied hard, building skill and balancing luck to become a powerhouse in the sport. Fast forward more than a decade, and she’s now sponsored by the World Series of Poker (WSOP), competing in WSOP tournaments all over the world including Prague, the Bahamas, and Cypress, all while documenting her life as the most subscribed female poker player on YouTube. 

“I think one of the big reasons for my growth is I do daily vlogs at the most watched poker times of the year,” said Gavin-Mather who creates videos every day for seven weeks during the WSOP. “That quickly catapulted me from zero subscribers to 10,000 subscribers in maybe two months.” 

Gavin-Mather’s business mindset took her poker wins at the table and turned them into a life built around professional poker, showing others what it’s like to go all-in on a sport made up of 95% men. 

Before she was known among the ranks in poker, she was sometimes underestimated.  

“Men have the tendency to think that women are not good at poker. They think that when we bet, we always have the best hand. They don’t think we’re capable of bluffing, so they will try to be more aggressive towards us at the table,” said Gavin-Mather. “They’ll try to put more pressure on us with bets and raises, so that was very much my experience back before I was known, which actually can be an advantage because if they underestimate us, we can come up with strategies to combat that.”

In her experience, you have to have tough skin to participate in a poker room, and an even tougher skin if you’re going to have a YouTube channel on top of it. “I’ve been voted out of games because I was winning in them and they didn’t like that a woman was beating them,” she said as she recalled being called names and even having cards thrown at her on some occasions. “I would say 97% of men are very respectful,” she added. “But you’re going to have that small percent of jealous people.”

Gavin-Mather’s advice for women looking to get into poker: “For the women reading – don’t be afraid to step into a poker room. At the end of the day, everyone gets the same two cards, and if you want to take it professionally, make sure to study the game, stay on top of strategies because poker does get tougher and tougher,” she said. “Stay on top of your game, have thick skin, and also don’t be afraid to try. I think that’s a big road block that a lot of women face. They’re intimidated by the poker room atmosphere, and I promise you, once you sit down at the table, all of that fear will go away.”

Now that Gavin-Mather is known in the industry, she finds that some opponents assume they know how she plays and will try to either use her strategies against her or they want to play against her because “it’s cool to play against a pro.” Either way she’s always distinguishing how her opponents perceive her and the strategies she can use to adjust to that perception.

As the author of “Mastering Small Stakes No-Limit Tournaments”, a book about strategies to beat small stakes poker tournaments, Gavin-Mather noted that those looking to dip their toes into poker will find the book helpful as it starts off with some basics and goes into more advanced concepts. 

Among her career highlights, Gavin-Mather won $70,000 live cash with a $26,000 buy-in at the WSOP Paradise Super Main Event in 2025, marking a career best thus far. In addition, she won third place in the World Poker Tour L.A. Poker Classic for a $40,058 cash, 10th place at Bay 101 Shooting Star with a $5200 buy-in and a $41,060 cash. She won two RunGood Poker Series rings at All-Stars and Checkpoint San Diego, and was nominated for Global Poker Index’s Rising Star in content creation in 2022. Most recently, she was in Lake Tahoe for the WSOP Circuit where she played five tournaments and made three final tables.

“I jump on the opportunity to come play in Lake Tahoe, it’s my happy place. It’s so beautiful and serene. It’s really nice to play poker in such a magical atmosphere because poker can be very stressful,” she said. “It’s hard to be stressed when you walk outside and see such an amazing lake.” 

Gavin-Mather has more than a decade of consistent World Series of Poker results, including deep runs at the 2018 Main Event and the 2026 WSOP Europe Ladies Championship
Provided/Lexy Gavin-Mather

Although Gavin-Mather continues to break barriers in the poker industry, she’s got her sights set on a few other goal posts. One is winning the WSOP Main Event which happens in July and is a $10,000 buy-in. First place winners can receive between $8 million to $12 million along with the most-coveted prize in poker, the WSOP bracelet. 

The other is to win Top Female Player of the Year for a second time. She already won in 2020, but because it was the year of the COVID-19 pandemic, Gavin-Mather wasn’t able to attend an award ceremony. “If I were to pursue another crazy goal, it would be to be Female Player of the Year again and get my award.” 

Through it all, Gavin-Mather remains appreciative for the opportunities she’s been given and the guts it took to take risks. 

“I’m grateful for the career that I’ve had, and I’m looking forward to seeing what comes next.”

To learn more about Lexy Gavin-Mather, visit lexygavinmather.com. Her weekly newsletter can be accessed by going to https://poker-digest.lexygavinmather.com/.

You can find Lexy Gavin-Mather on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/@LexyGavinPoker.

UNR Lake Tahoe Campus hosts third LGBTQ+ nursing summit

INCLINE VILLAGE, Nev. – The University of Nevada, Reno’s (UNR) Orvis School of Nursing hosted the third LGBTQ+ nursing summit at the Lake Tahoe campus, focusing on direct actions through policy, education, research and practice that could improve healthcare for the queer community.

The 3rd LGBTQ+ Nursing Summit was held at the UNR Lake Tahoe Campus.
Eli Ramos / Tahoe Daily Tribune

According to a report from The Fenway Institute, LGBTQ+ health has suffered significantly under the current administration. $125 million in LGBTQ+ health funding was slashed from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and there has been direction to prohibit gender-affirming care for minors and adults. Cuts to Medicaid have also hurt LGBTQ+ adults, who are twice as likely to have Medicaid as their primary insurance than non-LGBTQ+ people.

Nurses, who often work on the ground with patients in all communities, are primed to see these inequities and address them if given the chance—such as at the LGBTQ+ Nursing Summit, which was supported by the Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation.

The summit was been hosted at Columbia University in 2019 and the University of Iowa in 2025 (after a pause due to COVID-19), but it felt particularly special for it to be hosted in Nevada, which has enshrined the rights of LGBTQ+ people and gender-affirming care for minors in the past.

UNR President Brian Sandoval, who previously served as Nevada’s governor, signed legislation that enshrined the Equal Rights Amendment and gender-affirming care, including for minors, in Nevada. Sandoval praised the summit’s gathering saying that “We are coming together at a moment that is pressing and consequential… and this is how meaningful progress happens.”

Charlie Yingling, Dean of the Orvis School of Nursing, was equally proud of the summit happening at the Lake Tahoe campus, which will be opening applications for a rural nursing program later this year. Yingling previously attended the LGBTQ+ nursing summits as a participant and dean, but pitched the idea of holding the summit at UNR.

From left to right: President Brian Sandoval, Charlie Yingling, Phoenix Matthews and Tonda Hughes.
Eli Ramos / Tahoe Daily Tribune

“At this moment in time, it’s important for people working with marginalized communities to come together to sustain one another and support one another, especially because many participants are coming from states where work like this is at high risk,” said Yingling. “It is our job as nurses to advocate not just for patients, but for communities we work with, and this is a form of collective advocacy.”

Tonda Hughes, associate dean for global health research at the University of Columbia, was the origin point for the LGBTQ+ Nursing Summit. She is known for her research on lesbian populations and alcohol use, which she says she began conducting at a time where there was very little academic or monetary support for the work.

“This is what the personal is political means,” said Hughes to the participants. She noted that her work had evolved from a time where she was discouraged from researching queer communities, so there were lessons to learn from times when institutions show little support for LGBTQ+ people.

Hughes told the Tribune that there has been a long history of queer people in nursing—one significant example are the lesbian nurses who took care of gay patients during the HIV/AIDS crisis (which is why the LGBTQ+ community moved lesbians to the front of the acronym.) “Nursing can still be somewhat conservative, but this is one way to build this collective effort, and we’ve made a lot of progress.”

Hughes was nominated for the inaugural Sigma/DAISY Nurse Scientist Leadership award, which she said is proof that things can and will change in the field.

Charlie Yingling, dean of the Orvis School of Nursing, speaks to the summit.
Eli Ramos / Tahoe Daily Tribune

This year’s summit focused on deliverable actions and continuing the work, a change from the previous years—and a welcome one. The participants formed groups around the four pillars of policy, education, research and practice and created projects that could be executed in the current challenging times.

Of the 46 participants in the summit, several of them work in the Northern Nevada region, including Lisa Thomas, Jasen Brooks and two UNR undergraduates.

“So much of this work happens in a silo and so much of it is pushed under the rug,” said Thomas, who works as an associate professor at UNR. Her research has recently focused on mental health at the college-level, where LGBTQ+ populations tend to fare worse than their straight and cisgender counterparts. “Having all these minds together who are passionate about this kind of work can produce amazing outcomes.”

Brooks, who is the director of identity and cultural engagement at Orvis and chair of the queer organization QLAB on campus, focused on education around LGBTQ+ health for nurses, which has been lacking in the past. “Education is the root of everything we do in healthcare. Our job is not just to transmit information to nurses, but also to patients—often when they’re sick,” said Brooks. “Our community, along with other marginalized ones, are massively underserved and in a challenging political and social climate, it is our job to make sustainable changes to improve healthcare for all people.”

Brooks also mentored and taught two undergraduate students who attended the summit. “They are the representation of what the future can be and an amazing beacon of what can happen.” Brayson Gomez and Hope Crockell both expressed their excitement to be part of a summit that could enable changes, as well as supported and uplifted their identities. The two previously presented on LGBTQ+ healthcare in behavioral health and HIV care and plan to work in the Reno area after they graduate this spring.

Phoenix Matthews, one of the speakers at the summit, has observed the field of LGBTQ+ healthcare growing, just as Hughes has. But their work has been jeopardized by federal administration cuts. “It has been such a hit to what was a solid area of research,” they said. “To be see that be jeopardized in such a short amount of time by the current administration shows why it’s important to come to these.”

Dallas Ducar gives a policy update to the attendees of the 3rd LGBTQ+ Nursing Summit.
Eli Ramos / Tahoe Daily Tribune

Last year’s summit included a lot of commiseration on the uncertainty of the field, especially with major slashes to budgets and a crackdown on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion policies and language. However, Dallas Ducar of the Fenway Institute spoke on the current state of policy and what could be done. “State level advocacy matters the most right now.”

Ducar gave examples of how nursing groups have a voice in the policy world, especially in advocating for patients who could be harmed by legislation. She said, “Never underestimate your voice in the space. There are many fights happening in the courts right now, and we’ve seen some of those be won.”

Outcomes from the summit included plans to implement and advocate for queer curriculum, create toolkits for nurses on LGBTQ+ health, publish research on best practices for LGBTQ+ patients and create a civic engagement model for nurses interested in policy.

Hughes hopes to see the involvement of more deans and CEOs in future summits, especially as the work continues from the group that met. She, Yingling and Matthews were all excited for the sustainability of the work and continuing to host annual summits.

­Matthews said, “To know that this kind of work has an impact on people’s lives… I can’t imagine what else I would want to do I hope we can focus on building the infrastructure and strategies to protect from these kinds of vulnerabilities.”

The impact of this work, especially for LGBTQ+ identified nurses, is exciting for everyone.

“We are soldering back the arc of justice,” said Matthews. “Some of the smartest, fiercest, most resourceful and committed people I have met in my whole life are here. By doing this work, I am investing in my own salvation and freedom. It has given me a path towards freedom and liberation of other groups.”

How much snow fell in Tahoe this winter?—The answer may surprise you

LAKE TAHOE, Calif./Nev. – From hanging up skis early to a beach day in March, this winter in Tahoe didn’t feel like the longed-for snow utopia. But in terms of snowfall, has it been as sparse a winter as public perception suggests?

“We’re actually pretty close to average,” says director of the Central Sierra Snow Laboratory, Andrew Schwartz, Ph.D. The lab recorded a cumulative 294 inches as of April 17, putting the region at 87% of the annual median snowfall. That’s just about 40 inches below average.

But Schwartz says there is a reason why it hasn’t felt like an average winter.

While we’ve had plenty of snowfall, Schwartz says, “The story of the winter is really the warm temperatures.”

The above-average temperatures, including record heat in March, along with long dry spells, led to a premature and rapid melt. It’s the reason that despite near-normal snowfall, the snowpack contained only 10% of the snow water equivalent (as of April 17) that is typical for this time of year.

Although the region is just under normal snowfall levels, it is actually above average (107% of the median) in precipitation due to substantial rain this winter.

“So if temperatures had been colder,” Schwartz explains, “then we’d be above average for snowfall.”

Both the early snowmelt, and receiving a significant amount of precipitation as rain, are signs that the region experienced a “warm snow drought.”

Will we see more of these winters?

The characteristics that defined this winter aren’t going away.

“We’re at an inflection point,” Schwartz says, referring to a demarcation line around 2025 and 2026 in climate models for the region that signal low-to-no snow and more rain for quite some time.

“Over the next two decades, we’re expecting a lot more of these types of winters,” he says, “and believe it or not, that’s going to be considered good conditions compared to what’s going to happen basically after the next 30 years or so, which is very little snow compared to even this year.”

Researchers have based these projections on current trends and climate models.

For reference, October and May used to be dominated by snow in the region until the 80s and early 90s. Around that time, those months became increasingly governed by rain.

Now, Schwartz says, all months, except February, show a trend line venturing away from snow to rain.

The impacts of changing winters

These changing winters could have a wide range of implications. One of those is the impact on winter recreation, as skiers felt this year with extremely variable conditions.

“I think there’s a higher likelihood of accidents and injuries in the recreation world during these types of winters,” Schwartz says, “because people aren’t getting the conditions they want and push their limits more.”

Having a light snowpack around April 1, like the region experienced this year, also presents a challenge for water managers. That’s because around April 1, water managers can begin retaining more water in reservoirs. In the months leading up to that, managers retain less to leave room for winter flood mitigation. So when the snowpack melts ahead of April 1, the reservoirs miss a significant portion of the snowmelt.

A lack of normal water flow can also create challenges for aquatic species, and, of course, wildfire risks increase.

Despite what felt like a less-than-ideal winter this year, Schwartz says, “We’re not as bad as we could be. There’s always a time for doom and gloom. I think the fact that we’re coming off of several consecutive years of average or above average snowfall and water is a great thing.”

It sets the region up well for the summer, despite the small snowpack.

The bigger picture

This winter experience in the Tahoe-Truckee area is indicative of overall climate change in the West, Schwartz says, with certain regions, such as those farther south, becoming drier.

Fortunately, researchers don’t expect the local region to become drier, but, as stated above, it will become more accustomed to rain than snow.

It isn’t exactly new information.

“Unfortunately, the climate models have shown that our region is going to transition away from snow and to rain for a long time,” Schwartz says. “And so we haven’t necessarily acted fast enough to reduce carbon emissions to stop that.”

Just because the region is trending in this direction doesn’t mean every winter will feel this way.

“It’s not all bad from here on out,” Schwartz conveyed. “There will be years where we get good snow, and we get cooler than average temperatures, but those years are going to become less and less frequent as the decades go on.”

New Lake Level Lounge offers unique approach for events using forward-thinking audio and visual integration

Lake Level Lounge is now open
Provided/Marley-Moss Roots Photography

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. – An all new event space has joined the South Shore, and what makes Lake Level Lounge stand out isn’t just its beautifully designed interior, it’s the intricate and interactive production aspects offered to guests to really bring their events to life. 

With his extensive background in wedding planning and event management as well as a push from the hands of the COVID-19 pandemic, Chase Hoagland found himself starting his own business, first in the form of a production company, and now as the owner of Lake Level Lounge – a space to showcase those production skills. 

“I always saw a real need for a space that was dedicated towards fostering growth within artists and a place that brings a high level of entertainment, both audio and visual combined,” said Hoagland. 

What better place than a building full of history in the heart of South Lake Tahoe? Lake Level Lounge helps give the 3450 building of Lake Tahoe Blvd a new lease on life. Hoagland started his venture to give the dated venue some much needed TLC, and over the span of three years, he turned it into an unrecognizable space with a sophisticated and modern design. 

“This project required a lot of foresight to ensure every technical element could come together seamlessly, creating a fully immersive and interactive space,” said Hoagland. “From the beginning, the build was approached with both form and function in mind. The design was carefully planned to support advanced audio, lighting, and projection mapping without taking away from the clean, modern feel of the space.” 

Renovations for the project took three years to complete
Provided/Marley-Moss Roots Photography

Hoagland’s goal is to cater to all event types, from weddings and special functions to music events. “I really want to be able to capture different themes or overall visions of each event. I can have the pillars and all the lighting match the wall, I could do huge picture collages,” Hoagland said as he touched on keeping technology integrated and customizable for each gathering. “I feel like this project just really meshes all of my worlds.” 

Along with the perks of having one-of-kind production aspects at Lake Level Lounge, the venue also boasts a bar with beer and wine as well as a focus on non-alcoholic elixirs. “We use herbal extracts and tinctures sourced from reputable elixir bars and producers,” – among them, Nevada City’s Elixart and Luxe Elixirs. 

“I wanted to bring that non-alcoholic approach to Tahoe, because there are ways you can still get those subtle uplifting effects, as well as other effects alcohol doesn’t provide,” said Hoagland. “There’s different properties that uplift you, but you don’t feel inebriated at all. You can still drive home at the end of the night, and it’s much tastier than drinking alcohol.”

Lake Level Lounge offers beer, wine and focuses on non-alcoholic elixirs during events
Provided/Marley-Moss Roots Photography

Hoagland aims to have Lake Level Lounge be that go-to space for the community, somewhere they can call home, feel welcomed and also draw in high-level events to amplify more tourism for the city. 

“The space was built piece by piece, balancing design, technical integration, and creativity at every step. The end result is a venue where the audio/visual elements are not an after thought, but a core part of the experience, allowing each event to feel dynamic, elevated, and completely unique,” Hoagland added.

To learn more about Lake Level Lounge or to request a proposal for an upcoming event, visit https://www.lakelevellounge.com/

Lake Level Lounge is located at 3450 Lake Tahoe Blvd, Unit 2, in South Lake Tahoe, Calif.

Lake Level Lounge aims to cater to all event types
Provided/Marley-Moss Roots Photography

Market pulse: Yikes!

“The current energy crisis is more serious than the ones in 1973, 1979 and 2002 together.” That’s a quote from Faith Birol, executive director of the International Energy Agency. Birol was referring to the magnitude of the disruption of energy supplies. Industry insiders are also alarmed. Wall Street isn’t as worried.

Enthusiasm for oil stocks peaked a month ago on news of a cease fire and the anticipated opening of Hormuz. What hasn’t peaked is enthusiasm for everything related to AI. But how do investors anticipate products and services that will be impacted by AI? Perhaps by separating those companies that are developing software and programs from those that will use them. That process began years ago in Corporate America when mainframe computers replaced thousands of workers using incompatible terminals. ATMs replaced bank tellers.

In my two-part AI article from last August I wrote it would be hard to predict winners and losers from AI. AI stocks have indeed been a mixed bag. Semiconductors became high profile winners while software stocks of all kinds emerged as surprise losers.

Again, going back to my AI articles, I chose instead to invest in companies that provided the power to data processing. Think Williams Cos. (WMB), GE Vernova (GEV), Invesco Solar ETF (TAN), and Market Vectors Nuclear Energy ETF (NLR). Add Quanta Services (PWR) to that list

The natural gas infrastructure stocks are still well positioned to serve the growing economy, data centers and the export market. Due to warm weather and ample supplies in storage natural gas prices have been lower than expected. For now. Moving gas from where it’s found to where it’s needed will be a growth industry for years. I own several pipelines, none of which have significant exposure to the price of crude.

Despite bad news at every turn, stocks have done well. Not all, of course, but enough. Even with the war earnings have remained strong. Bravo Corporate America.

Once the war ends today’s uncertainties will be history. Earnings will be higher and so will stock prices. Interest rates will be virtually unchanged. The market reflects expectations and is usually right. The Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq are saying the war will end with little impact on us or the economy. That alone is reason to be optimistic.

David Vomund is an Incline Village-based fee-only money manager. Information is found at www.VomundInvestments.com or by calling 775-832-8555. Clients hold the positions mentioned in this article. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Consult your financial advisor before purchasing any security.

Hernias: Battling the Bulge

Hernias occur when the stomach, intestines, or other organs in your abdomen poke through a tear or weak spot in the fascia, the body’s strength layer. A hernia might feel like a lump in your groin or belly. This bulge often hurts when you cough, lift something heavy, or strain to go to the bathroom.

Some people are born with hernias. Others may develop them from risk factors such as obesity, age, lifting heavy objects, having a chronic cough or constipation, or playing sports. Organs also can push through a scar if you’ve had surgery on your abdomen.

Identifying a Hernia

The different types of hernias occur in different areas of the body:

  • Groin hernias are the most common type and occur in both men and women.
  • Another type is umbilical hernias. These form when the strength layer around the belly button doesn’t join properly.
  • Hiatal hernias can contribute to heartburn or acid reflux disease. They develop when the stomach bulges upward through a defect in the diaphragm and into the chest.

You can’t always prevent hernias. However, you can lower your chance of getting certain types of hernias by:

  • Maintaining a healthy weight
  • Avoiding tobacco
  • Using proper lifting techniques to prevent strains

Treatment Stops the Pain

Talk with your doctor if you think you have a hernia. While some hernias don’t need to be treated until they begin causing pain, a surgical operation often is needed to relieve symptoms and prevent a hernia from getting worse.

Kimberly Evans, MD, is a board-certified surgeon at Barton General Surgery. Her areas of interest include advanced trauma care, advanced da Vinci robotic surgery, and general surgery. To learn more about general surgery services at Barton Health, call 530.543.5691.

Lime returns to South Lake Tahoe for 2026 season with fleet of E-Scooters

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. — Lime, a leading provider of shared electric vehicles globally, is back in South Lake Tahoe for the 2026 season with its fleet of Gen4 e-scooters. In partnership with the City of South Lake Tahoe, Lime continues to provide a safe, affordable, and sustainable transportation option for residents and visitors. 

Lime began the process of scaling its fleet today, building up to its fleet of nearly 500 vehicles. 

Lime scooters are returning to South Lake Tahoe
Provided

“South Lake Tahoe has embraced shared micromobility, and we’re excited to return for another season with a continued focus on safety, responsible riding, and proper parking. Our Gen-4 e-scooters offer a convenient, low-carbon way to get around the city. Whether connecting to transit, running errands, or exploring South Lake Tahoe’s natural beauty outside of the confines of a car, Lime is thrilled to be back on the streets while helping support the city’s broader mobility and climate goals,” said Monica DiLullo, Senior Regional Lead of Government Relations for Lime.

Rules of the Road

Tandem riding is not permitted on Lime vehicles, and riders must be 18 or older to ride Lime. Lime frequently emphasizes this to riders via an introduction flow for new riders, in-app and email communications, and using stickers on our vehicles.

To help create a safe and enjoyable experience for both riders and nonriders, Lime encourages all riders to follow key safety guidelines: wear a helmet, obey traffic signals, use bike lanes where available, avoid riding on sidewalks, yield to pedestrians and park responsibly to keep sidewalks clear. 

By riding responsibly, the community can help keep South Lake Tahoe’s streets safe, accessible and welcoming for residents and visitors alike as the season begins.

Join Me in Voting Yes on Measure G

A friend recently told me he skips elections because he doesn’t trust candidates. I disagree—but if you’ve ever felt that way, here’s some good news: this June, you can vote for something tangible, local, and nonpartisan. You can vote for the places we all use and love.

Measure G continues essential funding for maintaining bike paths, parks, pickleball courts, and community fields. It doesn’t raise taxes—it simply extends a funding measure voters have supported for more than 25 years.

As an everyday cyclist, I see the impact firsthand. I rely on our bike paths to get to work, Lake Tahoe Community College, and community events. Without this funding, those paths won’t be cleared in winter or repaired in summer. Parks will deteriorate. Fields will go unmaintained. The spaces that bring people together will start to fall apart.

Think about a summer evening at Live at Lakeview. Hundreds of bikes line the valet area, keeping cars off the road and congestion down. Or picture Tahoe Paradise Park hosting the Meyers Mountain Farmer’s Market or Music in the Park concert series. These experiences depend on safe, well-maintained public paths and parks.

For homeowners, Measure G costs about $18 per year—less than a pizza—but delivers year-round value. It supports safer streets by keeping cyclists and pedestrians separated from drivers. It preserves the outdoor amenities that define our community and quality of life.

Measure G already has strong support, but turnout will decide its fate. That’s the real risk.

When your ballot arrives, take a moment to invest in the infrastructure that keeps South Lake Tahoe active, connected, and vibrant. Vote Yes on Measure G.

Learn more at measuregtahoe.com.

Victoria Ortiz serves on the board of the Lake Tahoe Bicycle Coalition, an all-volunteer nonprofit working to make Tahoe more bicycle-friendly.

Long-Standing Jibboom Housing Project to Go Before Planning Commission, Whether Hearing Limit is Reached to Be Determined

Residences at Jibboom, a mixed-use development comprising 62 residential units across four buildings and ground-floor commercial space, has been working its way through the Town of Truckee planning process since January 2018. On Monday, May 4, the Truckee Planning Commission will review the project at 5 p.m. in the Town of Truckee council chambers (10183 Truckee Airport Rd.). The item was pushed from the commission’s April 21 meeting after a noticing error.

“I think it’s going to be very similar to 2024,” said Sean Whelan, developer of the project, in reference to when the Truckee Planning Commission approved an earlier version of the project. “I walked out of that planning commission meeting, and I felt vindicated. I felt supported. Those commissioners in 2024 gave our team everything we wanted and more. Really a pretty pleasant experience. I don’t think it’s going to be any different this time around.”

The Residences at Jibboom site is located at the intersection of Jibboom and High streets in downtown Truckee. The four-building project imagines “a multifamily housing development set in old town Truckee that exceeds the Town of Truckee’s goals for workforce housing and sustainability practices,” according to the project website. Ten of its 62 units are deed-restricted and dedicated to low-income housing. The four buildings of the project range from three to four stories tall. Moonshine Ink has reported on the project often, and Whelan has written multiple opinion pieces.

In the nine years since first being submitted, the proposed development has stalled for various reasons, including: incomplete applications, re-zoning efforts, unmet conditions of approval, and construction amendments. The project falls under the auspices of California’s State Density Bonus Law (SDBL), which entitles developers to, according to the the California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD): “an increase in allowable density, concessions and incentives, waivers or reductions of development standards, and reductions in parking requirements” if they include a certain percentage of affordable housing units in the development.

Further, a preliminary application for the project was submitted in August 2023 under SB 330, or the Housing Crisis Act, which streamlines approval for new housing projects. This means the project in question can only be subject to the objective planning and zoning standards in effect at the time of submission.

In an October 2025 My Shot, Whelan said of the state housing laws’ applications, “In just nine months, we accomplished what had been impossible in the prior seven years: full entitlements.”

RESIDENCES AT JIBBOOM plans for 62 residential units across four buildings, with commercial space on the ground floor. Courtesy rendering

On Sept. 17, 2024, the Truckee Planning Commission approved a previous version of the Jibboom project. Among the conditions of approval, Whelan was required to obtain an access easement to an adjacent property and submit plans that complied with ADA regulations.

Per a notice from the attorneys for Jibboom Street, LLC, “the Applicant could not secure an access easement through the neighboring property at 10102 Jibboom Street. In addition … the approved floor plans needed to be modified. Thus, under the existing approval and conditions, the Applicant could not obtain a building permit.”

The project underwent modification to address the issues at hand. “The proposed changes,” states the same notice, “involved a 6.6% increase in square footage, with the Project’s use, density, affordability, height, and overall project scope and intensity remaining the same.

“Notably, the proposed changes were below the Town’s 10% threshold for administrative review for minor changes and the 20% threshold set by state law for which projects can lose their vesting rights. The applicant submitted the modified plans to the Town in October 2025.”

Between October and November 2025, Whelan and town staff held several meetings, after which Whelan said the town considered the changes major, requiring the project be submitted under the newly adopted development code and objective design standards.

The town also determined that with new project amendments, Residences at Jibboom no longer retained its August 2023 SB 330 vesting. Vesting “freezes” in place the “ordinances, policies, and standards adopted and in effect when a preliminary application … was submitted” (Gov. Code § 65589.5(h)(5), (o)(1).)

In response to the town’s devesting claim, Whelan submitted complaints with the California Housing Defense Fund (CalHDF) and HCD. Both agencies sent letters to the Town of Truckee disagreeing with the determination — Cal HDF on Nov. 20, 2025, and HCD, overturning the ruling, on Feb. 20, 2026.

Statute requires a 2.5-year timeline to commence construction. “For the project at 10090 Jibboom St., the project vesting date has been established as Aug. 29, 2023,” wrote HCD Specialist Xjvirr Thomas in an email to the town. “The final approval was given by the Planning Commission on Sept. 17, 2024, with the appeal period expiring Sept. 30, 2024. The 2.5-year period date to commence construction would run from Sept. 30, 2024, to March 6, 2027. After March 6, 2027, the vesting expires.”

“After HCD issued its ruling confirming the project’s vesting,” Whelan shared in an email, “the planning department then required us to revise the application once again to conform with the HCD determination, effectively requiring us to redo much of the work a second time.”

On Thursday, March 26, Truckee’s Historic Preservation Advisory Committee (HPAC) unanimously voted to recommend denial of the project’s Historic Design Review Amendment entitlement request, which is a discretionary permit. Among the committee’s specific points for recommending denial are that the overall design of one building does not reflect historic building guidelines and a proposed yellow color for another building is inconsistent with historic color patterns.

While HPAC is not a decision-making authority, it makes recommendations on housing projects as they relate to historic and cultural heritage resources of Truckee, among other duties and responsibilities.

Regarding Residences at Jibboom, “the feedback from the HPAC could assist the Planning Commission in its overall review of the proposed project, even though a lack of consistency with the Historic Design Guidelines would not be a basis for denial of the project under SB 330,” noted a town staff report.

On Monday, April 13, Brian O’Neill, attorney for Jibboom Street, LLC, gave the town a course of conduct notice claiming the jurisdiction’s actions “have caused unnecessary delay and have needlessly increased the cost of the project” and must cease. Whelan told the Ink that the town has moved the conversation about the conduct notice to outside counsel.

California code prohibits more than five hearings once a housing development project application is deemed complete. A key difference in interpretation between town planning staff and Whelan and his counsel places the Monday hearing as the critical fifth-and-final hearing (Whelan’s argument) or as the second hearing (the town’s). In short, Whelan argues that the project as a whole has had four hearings so far, while the town is interpreting the project’s amendments as deserving of their own hearing count, this being the second.

Town staff’s recommendation to the planning commission is to approve the requested amendments with 80 conditions of approval. Whelan said he’ll be asking the commission to revise four of those conditions.

Members of the community, through public comment, have expressed concern over slope-minimization, lack of a fire access and evacuation plans, a parking space shortage, and more.

Residences at Jibboom will provide 60 parking spaces, including 11 parallel spaces on Jibboom Street. Under the SDBL, projects can be allowed reduced onsite parking requirements.

“My goal as chair is, however it gets decided, I want the public and applicant to understand why it was decided that way,” said Truckee Planning Commission Chair Jason Toups. “That’s really important to me. Land use planning and approvals can be a very confusing process … Even if people disagree with the findings we make, I want them to understand why we made them. I see us spending time in the hearing to really explicate for the community what the standards are, what applies here, and why they apply.”

Should the project be approved by the planning commission on May 4, additional steps will need to take place prior to construction, including:

  • Recording of the final project map, which can take several months to undergo review by the town surveyor and engineer, as well as be publicly noticed; and
  • Adherence to the annual grading period, which limits ground disturbance between Oct. 15 and May 1.

In a March 13 email from Town Planner Jenna Gatto to HCD Specialist Thomas, Gatto wrote, “We are concerned about the ability for this project to meet the March 2027 deadline and more immediately, the Oct. 15, 2026, deadline for grading commencement.”

Whelan said once he has a grading and foundation permit, he’ll have a contractor grade the lot, dig trenches, and start on the foundation before Oct. 15. That’ll allow Whelan to build through the winter to meet the 24-month build requirement. Subcontractors for the project, he added, will be almost entirely local.

View the project’s amended plans here.

LVFPD firefighter-paramedic has died from injuries sustained during a heart attack while on duty

IAFF Local 4409 is asking for donations after Neil Schnaible suffered a heart attack at work, falling and hitting his head
Provided/IAFF Local 4409

Update: Tuesday, May 5 at 11 a.m.

After being admitted to Renown Regional Medical Center, firefighter-paramedic, Neil Schnaible, has passed away from his injuries.

Lake Valley Fire Protection District wrote a Line of Duty Death Announcement on May 4 stating, “Schnaible served the Lake Valley Fire Protection District and the community of South Lake Tahoe with honor, distinction, and unwavering dedication. He exemplified the highest ideals of the fire service – courage, professionalism, and a selfless commitment to protecting lives and property. His service to this
District and to this community will never be forgotten.”

As the flag at Lake Valley Fire Protection District headquarters is flown at half-staff in honor of Schnaible, arrangements for his memorial service are pending at this time and will be announced at a later date.

“Neil’s last wish was to be an organ donor, even in death he is giving life and a second chance to so many people across the country. That is what Neil wanted. We should all strive to be a little more like Neil,” the announcement said.

MEYERS, Calif. – Neil Schnaible, firefighter-paramedic with the Lake Valley Fire Protection District (LVFPD) is clinging to life at Renown Regional Medical Center after suffering a massive heart attack while working. 

During the heart attack, Schnaible’s fellow firefighters jumped into action, administering CPR until his pulse was restored. Unfortunately, while the incident occurred, Schnaible fell and hit his head, causing severe brain bleeds.

Over the course of the emergency, Schnaible’s wife and daughter were out of the country on a wellness retreat in Greece. The funds raised will help bring them home to be by Schnaible’s side during these critical hours. 

According to International Association of Firefighters (IAFF) Local 4409, facilitators of the GoFundMe, Schnaible is a years-long dedicated firefighter who “has spent his life showing up for others in their moments of need. Now it’s our turn to show up for him and his family.” 

“Local 4409 wants to thank everyone for their donations and thoughts through this hard time.  We request that everyone respects the family’s privacy at this time,” IAFF Local 4409 told the Tribune.  

The GoFundMe goal is $110,000 and currently stands at upwards of $64,000 as of Friday, May 1. 

To donate, visit https://www.gofundme.com/f/emergency-support-for-firefighter-neil-schnaible-and-family

Tahoe Knight Monsters Make Playoffs: Draw #1 seeded Kansas City Mavericks in Seven Game Series

For the second time in their two-year existence, the Tahoe Knight Monsters are heading to the playoffs. The hockey team earned the #4 seed in the Mountain Division of the Western Conference of the ECHL and will play the Kansas City Mavericks in the Mountain Division Semi-Finals of the Kelly Cup Playoffs.

“It’s really exciting,” said Brenden Paul, Knight Monsters broadcast and communications manager. “It creates an added buzz around the fan base. We’re looking forward to some bonus hockey in the end of April and the beginning of May.”

The series starts Friday, April 24, in Kansas City, with Tahoe hosting games three through five on April 29, 30, and May 2. In last year’s playoffs, Tahoe swept the Wichita Thunder in the division semis before getting swept by Kansas City in the division finals.

THE KNIGHT MONSTERS DEFENSE will have to be stout to keep the high-scoring Mavericks at bay.

The Mavericks have been a dominating force in the ECHL in recent years, making it to the conference finals last season and to the Kelly Cup finals in 2024. In the 25/26 regular season, they placed first in both the Mountain Division and the entire Western Conference, finishing with a record of 55-12 with 115 total points; ten wins and 15 points more than any team in the conference. Kansas City head coach Tad O’had was named ECHL Coach of the Year, and Marcus Crawford won Defenseman of the Year honors. Crawford also led the league in scoring — the first time in the ECHL’s 38-year history that a defenseman has accomplished the feat.

ICE TIME: The Knight Monsters against the Cincinnati Cyclones in a late-regular season matchup.

With a season record of 35-30 and 77 total points, Tahoe finished ninth in the conference and fourth in the Mountain Division. The team’s record against Kansas City was a less-than-stellar 1-6.

Yet Paul sees a silver lining. “Tahoe is one of the few teams who has been competitive across a series against Kansas City this year. Only one game was lopsided. The record’s not great, but most games went to overtime or were one goal games or there was an empty netter at the end. Tahoe has proven that they can hang with anyone in the league.”

Throughout the season, Mavericks showed a distinct home-ice. To have a shot at winning the series, the underdog Knight Monsters will have to steal one on the road and be stout at home.

UPPING THE ANTE: As intense as any hockey game can be, the home playoff games at Tahoe Blue Events Center will be even more electric. Photos by Jon Grant/Moonshine Ink.

Games three and four will take place at the Taheo Blue Event Center in Stateline Wednesday, April 29, and Thursday, April 30, respectively. If the Knight Monsters are able to extend the best-of-seven series, they will host game five Saturday, May 2, as well. Puck drops at 7 p.m. for all home games.

Tickets are still available but are going fast. See knightmonsterhockey.com for pricing and to purchase.

Paul expects a raucous environment inside the arena. “If you’ve been out to a game in the regular season before, double the energy and the atmosphere,” he said. “It’s nonstop buzz for 60 minutes. It’s electric. The playoffs are just a different brand of hockey.”

Lake Tahoe Tournament Ready

A No-Stress Guide to Youth Sports in Lake Tahoe

Early mornings. Racing from one matchup to the next. The thrill of keeping a swirl of moving pieces right on track, with enough breathing room to soak it all in. You know the drill when it comes to planning a youth sports tournament. You’ve just never seen it like this. The South Shore of Lake turns the whole logistics dance into a dream setting, where the stunning view alone feels like absolute victory. 

Imagine pine-fresh air greeting families as they arrive, the deep blue of the lake dazzling in sunlight, and the majestic Sierra peaks towering overhead. No wonder game days feel brighter here. Between matchups, the magic is in the pause: laughter on a stroll, world-class recreation at North America’s largest alpine lake, and core memories in the making for players and families.

What if those early morning warmups led straight into lakeside afternoons? Here, tournaments double as getaways with awe (and then some). Step away from the “what’s next” scramble. Wander, and your next adventure beckons beyond the bend. High spirits feel like an instant classic with stunning vistas, some available right from the roadside, but hiking and biking trails abound. Welcome to your game plan for keeping the trip shimmering right by turquoise pools in a family-friendly playground: smooth, simple, and blissful, from gleeful arrival to the final blow of the whistle.

Game Central: Play It All at These Vibing Venues

Dribbling, spiking, skating. From indoor showdowns to outdoor matchups under sweeping skies and sweet pine, South Lake Tahoe’s sports facilities keep the action rolling, with a splash of Tahoe magic just past the sideline. It’s easy to plan a small or full-scale, multi-sport weekend. These venues? Collegiate-sized hoops, high-school cross courts, and fully convertible arenas built for every spike, slam, and swoosh. Go for tournament logistics that feel effortless, leaving you free to celebrate every epic match-point marvel.

Tahoe Blue Event Center

4,400 seats. The MVP of indoor sports, Tahoe Blue flexes its convertible arena space to host basketball, volleyball, cheer, hockey, wrestling… anything you dream of. Think professional locker rooms, spectator seating, and fan‑friendly spots to rally that make tournament logistics feel effortless — all with postcard-worthy Sierra views you’ll carry with you. Stay here, and you’re right in the heart of downtown, close to all the action.

Tahoe Blue Event Center

Outdoor & Community Facilities

Athletes ready to move. Families here for the fun. Nearby, the new 64,000-square-foot STARS (South Tahoe Recreation & Aquatics Center) brings full-sized courts and gym space for basketball, volleyball, and team practice. Outdoor fields pick up the pace with warmups or extra scrimmages, so multi-sport weekends flow smoothly.

Between games, spots like Bijou Community Park welcome you with open turf for picnic breaks, impromptu soccer kicks, or a little pre- or post-game play under the pines. There’s even a full-on BMX track for the adventurous. Sunlit tennis, pickleball, and high-school gym courts round out flexible spaces that fit right into tournament schedules, helping every player stay active and energized.

STARS (South Tahoe Recreation & Aquatics Center)

Where to Stay: Cozy Game-Day Rooms, Minutes Away

Hop off the bus (or out of your car) and feel that recharge-your-spirit relief: everything is within reach. South Lake Tahoe’s walkable hotel cluster keeps teams and families just steps away from heart-racing match-day buzz. Full-service resorts with pools, spa perks, and lakeside dining. Charming, smaller properties for a short-and-sweet tournament retreat, with quick access to courts and fields. Thankfully, there’s a comfy spot for every squad to kick back and relax. 

Planning for larger teams? Total breeze. Groups can split across nearby hotels, where coordinating practice times, breakfast runs, or post-game debriefs feels second nature when it’s blocks away. Families love that everyone can land, unpack, and instantly feel part of the weekend hustle and bustle — whether it’s cheering on with signs from the stands, joining in scenic group activities, or winding down lakeside after a glorious day.

For right-in-the–action access, check out Harrah’s Lake Tahoe (plenty of rooms and amenities in this 18-story tower), Margaritaville Resort Lake Tahoe (family-friendly with spacious rooms, mountainside), or Caesars Republic Lake Tahoe (spread across multiple blocks together for a full weekend tournament), all easy walking distance from the Tahoe Blue Event Center.

Golden Nugget Hotel & Casino Lake Tahoe

Hit the Alpine Road (or Sky) to South Lake Tahoe

Getting to and around South Lake Tahoe is a quick swing in, whether you fly or road trip your way to the Jewel of the Sierra. Fly into Reno-Tahoe International Airport, then grab a shuttle or arrange a private ride straight to the South Shore and arrive ready to own the game. Part of a team driving in from California? You’ll be happy to know paradise has scenic highways that lead directly into town, with room for every ride near the main venues.

Once you get here, find everything just where you need it: courts, fields, hotels, and restaurants all clustered together. Teams and families can move from game to getaway in a flash. Short walks, quick rides, or spontaneous adventures between venues. It’s relaxing to navigate South Lake Tahoe.

What Happens Between Games? Sweet Downtime

Take a post-game nap with a view of this mountain haven. Swap stories over a waterfront breakfast. Share laughs while wandering your hotel. When a stay feels this awesome, your tournament becomes one of those rare, escapade-made weekends. Already counting down to game-day?

Well, South Lake Tahoe is a place to play, and a place to experience. Between games, teams and families can revel in a two-for-one breathtaking natural playground (hello, exhilarating family vacation). On the crystal-clear water (diamonds? No, that’s the sun lighting up Lake Tahoe), beaches call for downtime, paddleboarding adds a splash of friendly competition, and kayaking lets everyone glide across Lake Tahoe’s famous crystal-clear blue waters.

In the idyllic mountains, hiking and biking trails invite spirited adventure, with lake and mountain views that will have everyone snapping their new favorite photos. Catch your breath and savor true awe. These scenic views? Absolutely rejuvenating. Feel the scenery as it refreshes and revives you. For moments when the team wants to take it easy together, explore casual dining spots, family-friendly cafes, and laid-back joys — where everyone can delight in cherished bonding (without over-scheduling).

These in-between moments are just as magnetic as the rush of competition. Sunset paddles. A lush trail hike, full of woodsy wonder. That invigorating meal after a big day on the field. South Lake Tahoe gives the gift of precious time. On the court, off the court, memories this elevated feel extraordinary. Just awestruck.

The post Lake Tahoe Tournament Ready appeared first on Visit Lake Tahoe.

Family-Friendly Hotels in Lake Tahoe

Planning a trip to Lake Tahoe with kids? This guide is designed to help you find the best family-friendly hotels in South Lake Tahoe, so you can spend less time researching and more time enjoying your vacation. Whether you’re traveling with toddlers, school-age kids, or teens, choosing the right place to stay can make a big difference. Family-oriented hotels often offer conveniences like larger rooms, kid-friendly amenities, pools, easy beach or outdoor access, and activities that keep everyone entertained. From laid-back lakeside properties to resorts near attractions, this page highlights options that make traveling as a family smoother, more comfortable, and a lot more fun.

Top Family-Friendly Resorts (The All-Rounders)

These are the places that really check every box for families, comfortable rooms, thoughtful amenities, and easy access to things to do. If you want a stay where both kids and adults are happy (without constantly leaving the property), these are your best bets.

Marriott Grand Residence Club Lake Tahoe

Marriott Grand Residence Club Lake Tahoe
Marriott Grand Residence Club Lake Tahoe

Located right in Heavenly Village, Marriott Grand Residence Club Lake Tahoe is a go-to for families thanks to its condo-style suites with kitchens, separate living spaces, and walkable access to shops, dining, and the gondola. The pool and on-site amenities make it easy to relax after a full day out. Great for families who want convenience, space, and a central location

Margaritaville Resort Lake Tahoe

Margaritaville Resort Lake Tahoe
Margaritaville Resort Lake Tahoe

A full-suite resort where every room includes a separate living area, with larger options like two-bedroom family suites that can sleep groups comfortably—ideal for families who want space plus a fun, central location near Heavenly Village. Great for families who want resort energy, big suites and walkability.

Best for Space: Hotels with Kitchenettes & Suites

When you’re traveling with babies, toddlers, or even picky eaters, having a kitchen or kitchenette can make all the difference. These South Lake Tahoe properties offer extra space plus essentials like microwaves, fridges, and full kitchens—giving families flexibility for meals, snacks, and downtime.

Forest Suites Resort at Heavenly Village

Forest Suites Resort at the Heavenly Village Lake Tahoe
Forest Suites Resort at the Heavenly Village Lake Tahoe

Known for its large multi-bedroom suites that can accommodate bigger families, this property combines space with a prime walkable location and amenities like pools, hot tubs, and game areas that keep kids entertained. Great for families who want room to spread out and walk everywhere.

Desolation Hotel

Desolation Hotel South Lake Tahoe
Desolation Hotel South Lake Tahoe

A boutique, eco-conscious hotel with a cozy cabin feel, Desolation Hotel offers spacious accommodations, full kitchens, and outdoor areas that give families room to spread out. Its location near the lake and trails makes it ideal for active families who want both comfort and adventure. Great for families who want a quieter, nature-forward stay with modern amenities.

Best for the Budget

Traveling with family doesn’t have to mean overspending, especially in Tahoe. These properties strike a sweet spot by offering suite-style space, family-friendly amenities, and solid value, making them great picks for budget-conscious trips without sacrificing comfort.

Stardust Lodge

Stardust Lodge Lake Tahoe
Stardust Lodge Lake Tahoe

A longtime family favorite, this lodge offers suite-style rooms with kitchenettes (microwave, fridge, cookware) along with perks like free breakfast, multiple pools, and hot tubs. Its central location near Heavenly Village means you can walk to activities, saving both time and money. Great for families who want maximum value and tons of included amenities.

The Americana Village

Americana Village Lake Tahoe
Americana Village Lake Tahoe

Known for its cozy, apartment-style suites, this property includes kitchenettes, free breakfast, and family-friendly extras like a playground, pool, and game areas. It’s a quieter, budget-friendly option that still keeps you close to major attractions. Great for families who want affordable comfort, space and kid-friendly extras.

Tip: Budget-friendly hotels in Tahoe often provide the most value through included perks, like breakfast, parking, or kitchenettes, which can save a surprising amount over the course of a family trip.

Best for the Active Family

For families who don’t just want a place to sleep, but a place where kids can play, explore, and stay entertained, these activity-driven resorts are a great fit. From game rooms and kids’ clubs to pools and organized activities, these properties help turn your hotel stay into part of the vacation.

Hilton Vacation Club Lake Tahoe Resort South

Hilton Vacation Club Lake Tahoe Resort South
Hilton Vacation Club Lake Tahoe Resort South

This resort is built for active families, with a children’s activity program, game room, and activity center offering crafts, movies, and games to keep kids engaged. It also features both indoor and outdoor pools, plus nearby year-round adventures like hiking, skiing, and lake activities, making it easy to stay busy in any season. Great for families who want on-site activities and easy access to outdoor adventure.

Tahoe Beach & Ski Club

Tahoe Beach & Ski Club Lake Tahoe
Tahoe Beach & Ski Club Lake Tahoe

Located directly on the lake, this resort combines the feel of a vacation rental with resort-style amenities, making it a strong pick for families who want space and easy access to outdoor fun. Guests can enjoy a private sandy beach, year-round heated pool, hot tubs, and on-site activities like volleyball, all just minutes from Heavenly and downtown. Most accommodations are condo-style suites with kitchenettes or full kitchens, giving families the flexibility to cook meals while still enjoying a full resort experience.

FAQ: Planning Your Family Trip

View All FAQs

Yes, several South Lake Tahoe properties offer full kitchens or kitchenettes, including Marriott Grand Residence Club Lake Tahoe, Zalanta Resort at the Village, and Tahoe Beach and Ski Club. These are especially helpful for families with young kids who need flexibility for meals, snacks, and routines.

Family favorites for pools include Hilton Vacation Club Lake Tahoe Resort South with its indoor/outdoor pool setup, and Forest Suites Resort at Heavenly Village, which offers multiple pools and hot tubs. Resorts like Tahoe Beach and Ski Club also stand out thanks to their lakefront setting paired with pool access.

It depends on your activities, summer (June–September) is best for beaches, hiking, and water fun, while winter (December–March) is ideal for skiing and snow play. For fewer crowds and good weather, many families love the shoulder seasons (late spring and early fall).

The post Family-Friendly Hotels in Lake Tahoe appeared first on Visit Lake Tahoe.

Baseball is Back

Entering the stadium, I look down on the field and the outfield grass is as green as the color has ever been. The theme from The Natural, Robert Redford’s classic baseball flick of pasts becoming present, reverberates as the players are introduced with a tip of their cap, the boys of summer taking the field for another season in the sun. 

With the red, white, and blue bunting lining the outfield fences the scene drips Americana like a hot dog-scented Norman Rockwell. You feel the ghosts of baseball greats — Mickey Mantle and Roberto Clemente are the two names my mind selects — somehow taking it all in and smiling. The coaches and the umps shake hands at home plate like they’ve been doing for more than 150 years and the
game begins. 

In the top of the first inning, the Rainiers’ first batter of the season reaches on an error by second baseman
Tommy Troy; in a game as superstitious as baseball it’s not a good omen for the home team, but Aces left-handed flamethrower Kohl Drake bears down and strikes out the second batter. He’s the game’s “K batter,” and his swing-and-miss, per the PA announcer’s echoing voice, means that all draft beers are half price until inning’s end. Though most folks have just sat down, many quickly stand back up and scurry for the nearest concession stand. 

BALL OR STRIKE? A Reno Aces batter making the split-second decision to swing or not to swing. Photo by Jon Grant

Drake proceeds to strike out hotshot shortstop Colt Emerson, and then blows one by former San Francisco Giant Connor Joe to strike out the side. In the bottom of the first, Troy makes up for his error by wrapping a sharp single to right and moves to second on LuJames Groover’s walk. 

Then strides to the plate a man made for baseball lore — cleanup hitter Luken Baker, all 6’4” 285lbs of him, first baseman, Texas-born, biceps as big as the Babe’s. But Baker quickly shows he’s not all brawn. On a low-and-slow inside curve, though slightly fooled, he keeps his hands back and deftly drops bat-head onto ball, wristing the red-seamed sphere down the left field line for a standup double that scores Troy.

 

The Aces 1-0 lead holds until the top of the third. With a runner on first, the left-handed hitting Emerson drives an outside fastball over the left-centerfield fence to give the Rainiers a 2-1 lead, the ball nearly hitting the bullseye on the Tahoe Truckee Lumber Company billboard en route to its resting place on the train tracks beyond the stadium.

The jumbotron reacts with a romping closeup of Steve Carell as Michael Scott from the T.V. show The Office. “Nooooooooo!” he shouts in his adult-toddler schtick. “No! No! No! No! No!” 

Laughter cleanses the stadium’s palate, and Drake retires the side. The vibes are good — and the Aces rip three hits in their half of the inning, culminated by A.J. Vukovich’s two-out RBI single scorched to center to square the game at two.

Fast forward to the sixth

Cloud-cover has encroached and the Aces find themselves down 4-2. Vukovich starts off the inning by smashing a double deep into the right-centerfield gap, the stadium coming a-roar with chants of “Vuuuuuuu.” A hit batsman, two walks, and an infield single create a rally that scores two runs to retie the game. With the bases still full of Aces, LuJames Groover — the slick-fielding third baseman who already has two hits on the day — connects on a fastball and delivers a shot over the shortstop’s head.

The base hit drives in two, and the crowd is lit like a birthday cake as the Aces take a 6-4 lead. The sun breaks through the clouds, and it seems like the ghosts of Mantle and Clemente have lined up an easy pathway to victory for the home team. 

But no. 

Baseball will break your heart. Writer and one-time Major League Baseball commissioner Bartlett Giamatti even said, “It’s designed to break your heart.” And so, out of design or whimsey or simple athletic prowess, those darn Rainiers from tepid Tacoma score three dang runs in the top of the seventh to take a 7-6 lead, the clouds returning to dim the sun as sweatshirts are donned and heads shake slowly from side to side.  

The home team fails to plate any
runs in their half of the seventh or
the eighth, so we head to the bottom of the ninth with the Aces still
trailing 7-6.

But there’s hope! LuJames leads off the inning with a liner just above a leaping Connor Joe and his outstretched first baseman’s mitt, and Groover is aboard the bag with his fourth hit of the day. 

Luken Baker lumbers to the batter’s box and the crowd roars. The big man already has two big hits — and everyone’s hoping he’ll send us home happy with a walk-off homer. But Luken gets down in the count and then watches a hissing fastball streak by on the outside, the ump raising his arm to the sky to indicate that it caught the corner for strike three.

But it’s okay, it’s all good. Vukovich is up next, and the crowd incants its “Vuuuuuuuu” to spur him on. Still, the Rainiers’ closer makes him look foolish and gets two quick strikes. Us fans are on our feet, all manner of rally caps being worn backward and sideways and inside-out in hopes of appeasing the ghosts of Mantle and Clemente into gifting us a groundball with eyes or a little bloop that finds safe haven in that green outfield grass. 

But Vukovich chases a curveball in the dirt for strike three, and the Aces are down to their last out. 

If we were in Mudville watching the Nine, it would be time for Casey at the Bat. Alas, we’re not in a great American poem from 1888 but rather a real-life game in 2026, so it’s Kristian at the Bat; Kristian Robinson, from Nassau, the Bahaman with number 59 on his back now number one in our hearts. “Let’s go, Kristian! … Come on, Kristian!” He stands tall in the box, bat held strong as he works the count to three balls and a strike. 

LuJames leads off first base. Kristian gets a pitch to hit. He swings! He connects! A hard-hit line drive rocketed to right. It’ll get LuJames to third and heck he might even score …

But the game will break your heart. It’s designed to break your heart. The Rainiers’ right fielder charges in on swift feet and extends a long arm, the leather of his glove snagging the sinking liner in its web to record Reno’s 27th and final out. 

The stadium exhales a sigh that is a groan, and the game is over.

Us fans pick up our things and head for the exits. But before we leave, we turn, back around to the diamond, to the green of all that outfield grass. It was a beautiful day at the ballpark, and we know it. And Mantle and Clemente nod down from above, and another season of baseball has come back to us, as it has for so long, once more. 

Teaching in the Age of AI

On essay days in Craig Rowe’s classroom at Truckee High School, the rules are simple: nothing written at home.

Students open their school-issued Chromebooks, log into Google Docs, and begin typing. Rowe can see who made changes, what they changed, and when. If the document has a timestamp of 11:42 p.m. on a Thursday night, he knows rules were broken.

“Here’s something you don’t hear from a teacher,” Rowe tells his students. “I do not want you to do this for homework.”

Just a few years ago, take-home essays were standard practice in English classes. Now, Rowe — who describes himself as an “old-school English teacher” — has moved much of his writing into the classroom, not because he suddenly believes homework is ineffective, but because of artificial intelligence.

Programs like ChatGPT and Google Gemini can now generate a competent five-paragraph essay in seconds. They can brainstorm topics, build outlines, write introductions, and edit rough drafts. And while school networks may block these tools, most students carry a smartphone or have a personal laptop that can access them without restriction.

In the Tahoe/Truckee schools, as in schools across the country, the question is no longer whether students will use artificial intelligence. The question is how schools can preserve learning in a world where the work students are asked to do can now be done by a machine.

Administration: Guardrails

At the helm of Tahoe Truckee Unified School District’s Technological Services is Ed Hilton. The department’s motto is Where Students Master Technology for Their Future.

“We’ve got to prepare our students for college, career, and life, and technology is one of those things in every career,”  Hilton said. “So, ultimately we’re supporting our kids and using those tools that they’ll be expected to use when they move on from Tahoe Truckee.”

One of those specific tools is AI. “After ChatGPT came on the scene in 2023 we decided to test out some tools, especially in Google workspace. We use some productivity tools,” he said. “And I guess what we’re still concerned about is employees using tools that we haven’t vetted. Especially right as things came out, we did a lot of employee training, like to not upload student info so AI is not training on student info.”

Hilton estimates that in their Google and other curriculum tools, “about 1/3 use some sort of AI in the background.”

DISTRACTIONS DISTRACTIONS: Though cell phones are no longer allowed on a student’s person during classtime at many local schools, the constant distraction of the screen — even by school-issued laptops — is noted by both educators and students. Illustrations by Sarah Miller/Moonshine Ink

He was quick to make a distinction on AI: “If you’re talking about up-font AI-use like ChatGPT, it’s just the staff. Students can’t go to ChatGPT or Google Gemini. Only staff have access.”

Each student at TTUSD is given a Chromebook, which is a streamlined laptop running Google Chrome OS, for school use from kindergarten through the senior year of high school. Kids in younger grades leave the laptops at school, older students take them home for homework, the transition happening in middle school. While on their Chromebooks, or while utilizing a school’s Wi-Fi network, up-front AI tools and a variety of websites are blocked.

Yet many students, especially in high school, have their own laptops as well. When not on school Wi-Fi, these computers (not to mention the smart-phone in most middle school and high schoolers’ pockets) have no restrictions on any AI tool or website.

Hilton acknowledged this, and that students utilizing “front end AI” has been problematic.   

“As far as academic honesty, teachers are having those conversations,” he said, noting that the district has just finished a draft of its AI policy, which has been in the works since October with input from three public meetings between administrators, staff, and parents, that Hilton believes will be ratified before the end of the school year. “But we are not going to put our head in the sand. AI is definitely part of the students’ future.” 

Hilton repeatedly noted that any use of AI in the district has to be “secure” and “safe.” He pushed on the need for transparency and visibility of how students are using it, and averred that there must be guardrails in place that would, essentially, allow students to use some AI tools for schoolwork, but not all of them.

“Any tool should have some sort of scaffolding to students,” he said. “In that, you don’t get the race car right away, we teach you to drive first.”

TTUSD administrators and educators are watching how the test drive goes in another Placer County school. (Though TTUSD spans three counties, the district is under Placer jurisdiction.) Rocklin Unified has, in Hilton’s term, “deployed” more front-end school-wide AI tools, namely Google Gemini, into their curriculum — okayed and even encouraged for classroom and schoolwide use.

“Our students will use AI in their jobs. But it’s come so quickly — the use, the integration and all the different things,” Hilton said. “We want to make sure we are doing it correctly. The question isn’t are we using it or not, but is it beneficial or not? If we come up with educators who say it’s not beneficial, we won’t use it. But putting our head in sand and saying AI doesn’t exist is not valuable either.”

Teachers: Protect the Learning Process

While Rowe assiduously protects students’ writing process from AI, he is also working on ways to implement the newly evolving tech tools.

THING OF THE PAST: Like the disappearance of chalkboards in the 1990s and 2000s, education is seeing pens, paper, and take-home essays become bygone tools as it enters its AI frontier. File image

“What’s the role of AI in classrooms?” he asked rhetorically. “I think there is one. But the balance of where and when to use them is a work in progress with educators, myself included.”

Rowe’s approach depends on his classes, from AP Language and AP Literature courses to his communications class. In the latter, for instance, student presentations are a large part of the curriculum. He not only okays AI-use for aspects of these, but encourages it. “AI tools are really great for research,” he said, noting an example of a student looking into the difference between engineering programs at various colleges, and how just a few years ago the research could “take days” but “now it’s one query.”

He finds a boon in using AI-generated graphics as well. “I feel like for project-based stuff and visuals, AI has some really cool tools. If someone is giving a mini Shark Tank style presentation in my communications class, I encourage them to use AI for their visuals. In the past, students may not have had much for visual aids, and now it’s almost professional level visuals and art.”

While striving to keep ideation and writing a human-powered endeavor, Rowe does see educational benefit from AI’s use on “the back end” of essay-writing. He talks of a student who had a near-final draft of her paper but wasn’t sure if her tone was coming through as intended. The student, Rowe said, “plugged it into AI, into Gemini, and asked if the tone she had intended to use was the tone that came through.” The feedback the student received, per Rowe, was useful.

But as for writing, Rowe is wary of AI taking over too much of the critical thinking and drafting that has always been vital to the creation of an essay.

“I’ve definitely had my days when I’m grading, and I’ll read something that is just so obvious AI, and it’s depressing quite frankly,” Rowe said. “My initial reaction is that, ‘yeah we have to lock ’em down and just handwrite everything.’ And then I calm down and ask myself, “What is our mission?’” He answers his own question with: “It’s not for students to get a good grade in my class but to prepare our young people to be contributors in society.”

Rowe returned to the need for balance, and the importance for discussion. “Everyone is navigating their way through it,” he said. “This is classic where the technology is way out in front of the policies and the teaching methods.”

“The kids,” he concluded, “are adapting to AI really quickly. Much quicker than the educators and the school policies.”

Laurie Cussen, who teaches history and social studies courses at Truckee High, believes in not shortcutting the learning process. “AI is a tool for productivity once you’re out of education [and into the workforce],” she said. “That makes sense, but the learning has to happen before.”

She makes an apt comparison: “My first grader is a perfect example. He is learning arithmetic, addition, and subtraction. We’ve had calculators forever that could do that for him. But it is so much better for his neuropathways for him to do it himself — to learn how to do it himself.”

“We are in neuropathway building,” she said of herself and her fellow teachers. “We need to protect the productive struggle.”

Cussen gave another analogy: As a wrestler becomes a better wrestler through the struggle of wrestling, learners become better learners through the struggle of learning. Though she acknowledges using AI in some of her own lesson planning, she “shies away” from using AI in her classroom “because it is such a convenient shortcut.”

Illustration by Sarah Miller/Moonshine Ink

However, she does see a benefit for students to use AI as “a clarifier of concepts,” going as far as instructing her students to use AI at home to make practice quizzes, referring to it as “as a study companion.”

As for class time, Cussen echoed Mr. Rowe’s sentiments. “[AI] can do any assignment we do in class,” she said, lamenting that the school “is seeing a lot of stuff turned in that is purely done by AI.”

“If you want to ensure that the work is purely student generated, all the work has to be done in the classroom. If you let it go home, you know it’s not all student work.”

“I see class time as preserving the productive struggle, not giving students the cognitive offramp,” Cussen continued. “Protect the space of learning in class, then when you go home, use AI.”

The soft skills of communication, collaboration, problem solving, teamwork, and critical thinking must remain at the core of curriculum, she said. AI proficiency, on the other hand, she observed, can be coached in shorter time spans, through short-courses or future employees, down the road. “Learning the soft skills in school is vital,” she emphasized. 

Students: The Reality

Kate and Maria are juniors in AP courses at Truckee High. They have been in TTUSD schools since their elementary school days, and they say this year has been their most academically rigorous thus far. They both want to go to college, with some big names in education on their lists of desired schools. Both are taking an AP-heavy courseload. To protect their privacy, their names have been changed.

Both agreed that a difference regarding AI in this school year is “the teachers are more on edge about it in general.” The students spoke about the restrictions regarding AI-use on tests and certain assignments when on school Wi-Fi and Chromebooks.

“But for online homework, there are no restrictions like that,” Kate said. Both she and Maria have their own personal laptops. They said teachers sometimes do encourage or even instruct homework assignments to be completed with AI. Other times, students simply opt to use it.

“I do think sometimes it’s beneficial to use Chat GPT or Gemini because it can help answer questions you don’t know,” Maria said. “Let’s say there was a formula in math that I can’t remember, it can help me. It’s nice to have a website like Chat GPT you can trust to explain it to you step by step.”

The students echoed the idea of the AI study companion.

“Chat GPT for me is really useful for studying for tests because some teachers don’t give study guides,” Kate said, saying that she copies and pastes content from her Google Classroom page into one of the programs to have the AI generate, for instance, “flash cards for unit three of [class].”

When asked, in their view, if they had ever overstepped the ethical bounds of AI-use on an assignment, Maria answered, “Honestly, not really.” Both described how passing AP tests to receive the valuable college credits means that the student actually has to learn the material. (One cannot use AI tools on the test, for instance.) The two juniors also spoke to a genuine desire to learn for learning’s sake.

Maria stated that she did not use AI before she started taking AP classes. “I think learning has definitely changed a lot,” she said.

Still, similar to what their teachers and administrators have noticed, Kate and Maria also see some students finding workarounds and overly relying on AI, using it, in some cases, to complete the entirety, or the near-entirety, of an assignment.

“I definitely think kids are getting stupider from using it too much,” Kate said.

But both do not blame their peers for the overuse. “It’s just so accessible to just search up the answer if you don’t have time,” Kate said.

As for writing, the juniors find AI to be a key tool. “Honestly, writing is more like a first draft, not editing,” Kate said. ‘If I feel like I need editing, I’ll run it through Chat GPT.”

She usually writes out “one to two drafts” on her own before (and if) she seeks AI editing.

When a human-written draft is “run through” an AI program for editing, per the detection software turnitin.app, it is more difficult to catch than if the draft was initially generated by AI. Further hindrances to detection arise when an AI-generated first draft is edited by a human, when there is mixed AI-human authorship; or when content is too short to provide sufficient linguistic data, i.e., a paragraph-length piece rather than an essay-length.

Kate and Maria also noted using AI as a writing tutor on their essays for the “little things you can use ChatGPT for, like topic points or information … how do I format it …what facts do I put in … to see if I need a smoother transition on this” … “When I have no idea what to write about” and to “put it in and see how it’s going to grade me.”

When the students were asked if they work harder or less hard when they use an AI program like ChatGPT on their schoolwork, the students said: “Definitely less effort because it gives you the exact answer.”

How to not be tempted to use AI or other digital technology? Get rid of the screen.

“In my history class where there’s lectures, you can ask questions while you go over the information and take notes,” Maria said. “You don’t have any technology out, and you’re totally focused on the teacher and what they’re saying. I think that’s more impactful, the lecture and taking notes with pen and paper. Way more beneficial for sure. A lot of times when I take notes on my computer, I get sidetracked and open different tabs. When it’s pen and paper, I don’t have that excuse.”

EDUCATION FINDS ITSELF entering an AI landscape where the unknowns outweigh the knowns and where protecting the productive struggle of learning has become paramount. File image

Nevada: The Transplant and the Chatbot

In North Lake Tahoe, Incline Village schools fall under the Washoe County School District. I spoke with an early-grade elementary school teacher who wished to remain anonymous for fear of reprisal. She moved to the district from a state where, she said, schools were moving away from classroom technology. In Nevada, she found the opposite. “All curriculum is online,” she said of her classes. Even when she reads a book aloud, the students no longer gather around a physical copy with pages that she fans while teaching; the book is displayed on a screen.

She acknowledged that not all studies show classroom technology to improve learning outcomes, but in her new district, its use is expanding rather than shrinking. She broached how her school has “just implemented an app for kids to do their reading homework on instead of them reading books and completing a reading log.”

The app is called Paloma. Per its LinkedIn page, the company “is a venture-backed edtech startup that harnesses AI to unleash parents’ untapped teaching potential.” In short, Paloma’s AI generates personalized books aligned to what it knows about a student’s learning needs and personal/familial interests, and texts the student’s family a daily tutoring lesson plan.

“A few parents have actually complained since they do not want their child on technology,” the teacher said.

When I was unable to reach administrators at Incline High School, I turned to the district’s website, where I found something no other Tahoe/Truckee area school site had: an AI assistant. The chatbot introduces itself in writing: “Hi, I’m Ask your WCSD AI Assistant. How can I help you today?”

I asked it a simple question: Do Incline High students use AI?

The response began: “The Washoe County School District acknowledges that AI is rapidly reshaping education and can be a powerful tool for expanding learning.” The answer went on for several paragraphs, outlining both benefits and drawbacks, and included a statement that the district had established a framework “that ensures AI is used responsibly, ethically, and effectively.”

In my conversations with educators for this article, that was the first time I had heard the word “ensure” used in reference to students’ ethical AI use.

I asked the chatbot another question: How come AI is so good for first graders?

It responded that AI can “enhance learning,” “foster creativity,” and “personalize learning to meet individual needs, even at an early age.”

Then I asked a question more specific to writing: Is editing writing?

The AI responded that “editing is an integral part of the writing process,” and that “writing encompasses the entire process from ideation to the final product.” So, I asked a follow-up: Can AI help students with ideating and editing an essay?

“Yes,” the chatbot responded, stating that students are encouraged to use AI for brainstorming, for planning ideas and organizing thoughts, and in editing drafts.

Reading the responses, I wrote an if/then statement in my notebook. If ideation and editing are integral aspects of writing an essay and students are encouraged to use AI for them, then does that not innately represent cognitive offloading of integral aspects of writing an essay?

Yes, I believe it does.

When I returned a few days later and asked the chatbot the same questions again, its answers were similar, but not identical. The AI, it seemed, had learned — and altered its answers in subtle but noticeable ways.

WHAT WAS BROKEN? While old-school teaching methods were not perfect, a lot of students learned just fine for a long time before AI-infused curriculums and cognitive offloading. Illustration by Sarah Miller/Moonshine Ink

Waldorf: Trees Before Tech

Public schools are by no means the only option for students and parents in Tahoe/Truckee. Truckee alone offers a number of private and charter schools. I reached out to many and heard back from some, learning that each is either  allowing or encouraging AI in its curriculum to varying degrees. 

One curriculum, however, stood out as unique — Tahoe Truckee Waldorf’s, which teaches students on three campuses from preschool through eighth grade.

“We are a tech-free school and community,” said Alexandra Ball, the school’s admissions manager. “You will not find tech in our classrooms. We ask our families to be cognizant of screentime at home as well.”

Waldorf schools have been around for over 100 years, and they are built on principles of a comprehensive and holistic education aimed to grow students’ intellectual, creative, artistic, and practical skills. Standardized testing is typically limited, and teachers are given a relatively wider range of curriculum autonomy. Nature, play, music, and imagination are widely emphasized as integral tools for learning. A motto of Tahoe Truckee Waldorf is “Trees before Tech.”

“We are tech free not because we are anti-technology but because we believe in developing children’s cognitive abilities and critical thinking abilities before they are introduced to it,” Ball continued, noting the value of human interactions and dealing with real-life situations as educational keys in Tahoe Truckee Waldorf’s curriculum. “We believe it gives children a better start in life.”

Ball grew up in Washington State and went to The Seattle Waldorf School through eighth grade. She has lived in the Tahoe/Truckee area for “about a decade” and all three of her children are in the Tahoe Truckee Waldorf schools.

“It has been proven that technology is not great for attention spans and things like that,” she said. “Plus, it is not really showing that it helps children in reading, comprehension, or aptitude. Countries typically rated high in education, like Sweden, are moving away from technology and back to paper and handwriting. We are not doing anything revolutionary, we are just doubling down on what’s [been] proven to work. 

“I believe strongly in giving my kids and all children the best way to develop themselves. As a parent, before I send my children out to the world, I hope their whole brain is being used.”

Adoption: Playing Catch-Up

By the time I got to high school, auto shop had been removed from the curriculum. At the time, I didn’t think much of it. But as an adult who has spent thousands of hours driving, I truly wish my school had found a way to keep that class, and that I would have been taught about the inter-workings of such a crucial thing that my world would entail.

Perhaps it’s the same with today’s students and AI, the auto shop of yesteryear — a tool students will use constantly in their adult lives, whether schools fully embrace it or not.

By many criteria, AI is the most powerful tool the world has ever seen. In reaction, teachers talk about “protecting the productive struggle.” Administrators talk about guardrails. Students talk about accessibility and pressure and time. What they all agree on is that it’s not going away.

When human beings adopt a technology, we adapt to it. We built roads for our cars. We rearranged our living rooms for our televisions. We reorganized our attention spans for our smartphones. And now it’s AI.

Schools are trying to figure out how to adapt to this powerful newcomer — how to use artificial intelligence without letting it replace the very skills schools exist to teach. The technology is moving quickly. The policies, and the classrooms, are trying to catch up.