FORT COLLINS, Colo. — Telluride, one of many best-known ski resorts within the Western U.S., plans to shut within the coming days because of a labor dispute between its proprietor and the ski patrol union.
The Telluride Skilled Ski Patrol Affiliation voted Tuesday to strike Saturday after contract negotiations since June did not yield an settlement on pay. With no extra talks deliberate earlier than the weekend, Telluride Ski Resort mentioned it won’t open that day.
“We’re involved that any group, notably one which exists to assist individuals, would do one thing that may have such a devastating impact on our neighborhood,” proprietor Chuck Horning mentioned Wednesday in a press release.
It was not instantly clear whether or not the closure will last more. Resort officers had been engaged on a plan to reopen even when the strike continues, based on the assertion.
The patrollers are in search of to be paid extra consistent with their counterparts at different resorts within the area.
The union desires beginning pay to rise from $21 to $28 per hour, and for wages for patrollers with greater than 30 years of expertise to extend from $30-$36 per hour to $39-$48.60 per hour.
Whereas resort officers sought to put blame for the approaching closure on the union, Andy Dennis, interim security director and spokesperson for patrollers’ affiliation, mentioned it lies with Horning.
“He’s being a bully. That is what bullies do, take their toys and run,” Dennis mentioned. “All he has to do is give us a good contract, and this might all be over.”
Ski patrollers generally argue for extra pay on the grounds that the price of residing is excessive in ski cities and they’re accountable for individuals’s security. Patrollers’ duties embody attending to injured skiers and the managed launch of avalanches with explosives when no one is in vary.
Even with out a strike, Telluride has but to get going absolutely this season, with unusually warm weather that means simply 20 of the resort’s 149 trails have been in a position to open.
Patrollers across the Rocky Mountain area have been voting on unionizing lately.
Final 12 months an virtually two-week strike closed many runs and precipitated long lift lines at Utah’s Park Metropolis Mountain Resort. That strike ended when Colorado-based Vail Resorts acceded to calls for together with a $2-an-hour base pay enhance and raises for senior ski patrollers.
