Vail Resort board members received a scathing letter and accompanying presentation from one of its investors, calling out numerous shortfalls over the past five years along with the some strongly worded
Vail Resorts has given the same raises to a handful of non-unionized ski patrols that the Park City Mountain union won after striking over the holidays. In a letter to employees, Mountain Division President Bill Rock on Jan.
Following a nearly two-week strike from the Park City Professional Ski Patrol Association, another worker strike could be coming down the hill for Vail Resorts.
Unionized ski patrol units have earned themselves quite the spotlight this ski season. While Park City Professional Ski Patrol Association (PCPSPA) made headlines in 2021 as they negotiated for their last round of contracts with Vail Resorts,
A Vail Resorts investor made waves in the ski industry this week when he published a scathing report on the company as a business and called for the resignation of CEO Kirsten Lynch and former CEO Rob Katz,
Shareholder Late Apex Partners said that Vail’s performance over the last five years has been unacceptable and called for major changes in the hospitality company.
An investor in Vail Resorts says the company’s recent performance “has been unacceptable,” and is calling on the ski resort conglomerate to make sweeping changes following the Park City Mountain ski patrol strike.
While there have been many close calls over the years, no U.S. ski resort had experienced a strike in more than 50 years—that is, until last last month in
It's an influential time for ski resort employees here in Colorado. It comes after a Park City Mountain Resort patroller strike in Utah earned them higher wages and benefits. That success in another state with the same parent company is now playing into local contract conversations with resorts owned by Vail Resorts.
A skier filed a lawsuit against the company claiming that they were deceitful about a labor strike and the amount of terrain open in Park City.
In December, ski patrollers at America's largest ski resort, in Park City, Utah, went on strike against the $6 billion resort company Vail. After bringing the resort to a standstill for two weeks, they won big.
Late Apex Partners, an investment firm with a stake in Vail Resorts, requested the replacement of the company's CEO, CFO, and Executive Chairperson.