A class action lawsuit against Vail Resorts gains momentum as hundreds of affected customers claim the company failed to disclose the impacts of a ski patrol strike, ruining their vacations.
Across the internet, skiers and snowboarders swore off buying an Epic Pass and Vail Resorts (MTN) stock after Park City Mountain buckled under the weight of the holiday crush, a storm and a ski patrol and safety worker strike.
Vail Resorts is now the subject of a class action lawsuit over its handling of the recent ski patroller strike.
Visitors were greeted with long lift lines and minimal open terrain at Park City ski resort when the ski patrol union went on strike. One dissatisfied guest has filed a class action lawsuit against parent company Vail Resorts,
The latest: An Illinois skier who visited Park City during the holiday filed a class-action federal lawsuit Thursday on behalf of himself and "thousands" of guests, alleging Vail failed to warn customers that a strike was imminent and would affect their visit.
An important struggle is being waged by workers at the Park City Mountain Resort, 30 miles east of Salt Lake City, Utah, that highlights the staggering inequality in America. Two hundred and four ski patrol workers,
Neither the Park City Professional Ski Patrollers Association nor Colorado-based Vail Resorts released details about the ... Park City, about 30 miles (48 kilometers) east of Salt Lake City, is a resort town of about 8,000 people where the average home ...
In a joint statement, Park City Mountain Resort said striking Park City ski patrol and Vail Resorts have reached a tentative agreement.
Salt Lake City and Ogden were named among the best performing cities in the nation based on rankings in an economic report.
Despite fewer overall visitors and a strike, higher pass prices allowed Vail Resorts to increase its 2024/2025 season lift revenue.
Over in Colorado, ski patrollers from Eldora and Loveland resorts demonstrated outside Vail’s headquarters in Broomfield, Colorado, On Dec. 30. On New Year’s Eve, unions at Breckenridge, Crested Butte and Keystone sent a letter to Vail demanding the company stop pressuring its patrollers to leave.
Mayor Nann Worel and the Park City Council urged the company to immediately resolve the labor dispute to end uncertainty surrounding the ski area.