October 10, 2018

#KeepGrizzlyWild

Save Our Canyons and conservation and recreation allies have tried negotiating with Alta, we’ve tried trusting and verifying, but now in the final moments, Alta is trying to change the rules. They’re pulling land off the table, Grizzly Gulch, land that’s been beloved by the public long before it was owned by Alta and which has been central to years’ worth of negotiations throughout Mountain Accord and now the Central Wasatch Conservation and Recreation Area Act.

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Negotiations over the value for value land exchanges have always been conditioned on ski resorts giving up their valuable private pristine and non-developed land outside of their resort boundaries in exchange for desirable, and already impacted (parking lots, service roads, etc.), public land at their bases. Far from being a giveaway, these exchanges are legally required to follow a Forest Service review process ensuring that the monetary values of the lands exchanged is equal. In Alta’s case the public offering was Grizzly Gulch. Unfortunately, Alta has decided to unilaterally reconfigure their land exchange to no longer protect important areas like Grizzly Gulch, opting instead to consolidate their ownership of lands to maximize alpine development and minimize environmental protections.

Alta promised benevolent land management, no ski resort expansion and continued access, Alta has now done an about face, breaking these earlier promises regarding Grizzly Gulch. And let’s not forget — they plan to put a tram on Mt. Baldy and refusal to swear off additional infrastructure on the peak. Not to mention the 2017 destruction of precious alpine wetlands for lift replacement.

In the form below please fill out your information and submit a public comment helping to protect Grizzly Gulch. Make sure to edit this autofilled comment to represent how you feel. Also, if you ski at Alta or buy a season pass there it is incredibly important to mention that in the comment. This way Alta knows that you do not support development in LCC.

Take the Pledge Today!

Last night, the Central Wasatch Commission supported the introduction of legislation that would protect nearly 80,000 acres of land in the Central Wasatch Mountains! We worked incredibly hard with various interests from property owners, recreational interests, ski areas, and land managers under the leadership of the Central Wasatch Commission to find consensus on a number of outstanding issues that have been discussed for the past several months. We are proud that the commission supported the legislation as we were able to find resolutions to numerous issues facing the Central Wasatch.

There was, disappointingly, one issue that couldn’t be resolved — Alta’s desire to expand their resort at the expense of protecting our watershed and other recreational interests. More on that later, let's first focus on what the legislation does and where there’s agreement.

The bill unanimously approved will:

  • Establish a new Grandeur Peak Wilderness Area north of Millcreek Canyon
  • Place additional protections on White Pine Canyon to ensure watershed protection and irreplaceable experiences will be had for generations to come
  • Modify existing Wilderness boundaries along the foothills to accommodate a shared use Bonneville Shoreline trail
  • Add new land to each Wilderness unit in the Central Wasatch
  • Encompass the entire Central Wasatch in a protective designation called the Central Wasatch National Conservation and Recreation Area — prioritizing watershed protection, recreational access and prohibiting ski area expansion onto additional public lands.
  • Help initiate a public process for land exchanges between Snowbird, Solitude, and Brighton Ski Areas to give them more control over their bases while protecting under the NCRA legislation lands currently owned by ski areas in places like Cardiff Fork, Days Fork, Mt. Superior, Flagstaff Mountain, and Guardsman Pass.

This is a great moment and opportunity for the Wasatch, participating ski areas, our watershed, and the many communities and interests in the Wasatch! Save Our Canyons is proud to see so many people come together, some of whom have battled for decades, to resolve complex and oftentimes emotional issues about a place that inspires us all. To view last night’s meeting materials and read more from the Central Wasatch Commission, go here.

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Let’s move onto the topic of Alta. It had been a long time favorite of our founders, board members, and of course our membership, but in recent years we question the resort’s commitment to the protection of the Wasatch. It all started a few years back with the Supreme lift alignment where they destroyed native wetlands, in careless pursuit of higher speed lifts.

They then doubled down with their abominable pursuit to put a gondola atop Mount Baldy, where hiking to the summit had been a rite of passage for generations of skiers. Their vision for the Wasatch and engagement in discussions of the Mountain Accord and the formation of the NCRA legislation can only be summarized as myopic. We tried really hard to find solutions that attempted to share what was important about the Alta area, even solutions we didn’t particularly like, or that we thought would be incredibly hard sells to our members, but also the broader community who cherish these places. The resort rejected every concept, on the premise that they weren’t being given enough — even though they were being given things they couldn’t get today (land exchanges, additional snowmaking water, consolidated land ownership in Grizzly Gulch, for instance).

Admittedly, I’m hesitant of airing rejected concepts to find common ground. We should all be able to brainstorm options in confidence in pursuit of resolving the issues of the day, knowing that the ones that gain traction will be subject to sunshine and public scrutiny. As was referenced at the CWC meeting, we not only exhausted every conceivable option, we also exhausted the alphabet in labeling iterations of options. As such, the bill will not include any of Alta’s ski area, or the lands it owns in Grizzly Gulch. We went to great effort to try and find resolution to this issue, but in the end Alta wouldn’t concur.

Earlier this month, in a meeting with members of the Central Wasatch Commission, the Save Our Canyons Board approved three difficult scenarios in attempt to resolve a stalemate with Alta Ski area. Alta rejected two options that would have had them be a partner in the NCRA, benefiting from land exchanges and a reconfiguration of land ownership, and one option that removed Alta from the bill. It was stated by Save Our Canyons that it was the strong preference to have Alta as a partner and that we were not excited about the prospect of removing the ski area from the legislation. Too much uncertainty for the Wasatch, the only certainty was that there would be intense fighting.

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Alta owns some, but not all of Grizzly Gulch (see map above). They continue to say they can expand on their private land and connect to Solitude ski area today. There are, however, obstacles like the public land that is not available for ski area expansion that the resort wishes to expand onto under the current forest plan. This led the USFS to deny a proposal to expand up Grizzly Gulch in 2012, suggesting it might not be as easy for them to expand as they say.

Simply put, Alta owns much of the access to Grizzly Gulch and Twin Lakes Pass, but the skiing they are after is located on public lands in Patsey Marley and Mt. Wolverine. The Save Our Canyons board unanimously agreed that protecting the public lands and achieving certianty was a priority and with Alta not being interested in giving up any land in Grizzly Gulch, we though it a very difficult, but necessary compromise to aid Alta in enjoying its private land, while placing the protections afforded by the NCRA on the public lands in Patsey Marely, outside Alta’s existing Ski Area permit boundary.

In the absence of Alta Ski Area being flexible to hatch a mutually beneficial vision for the Wasatch, to allow for some give and take, they made a conscious decision to be fundamental about their property rights. We respect that decision, but must in turn be ardent in our protection of the public trust, our watershed, and prized dispersed recreational opportunities. We could not allow Alta to have it both ways – all things in the Wasatch necessitate give and take.

The entire purpose of Mountain Accord and this legislation is to shake up how the Wasatch is divvied up with a patchwork of property ownership. Resorts, property owners, and the public all have rights in this area — we also all enjoy privileges and opportunities as well.

Naturally, these things are oftentimes at odds with each other, as such, we have been working on this legislation to help provide opportunities that will benefit the numerous interests in the Wasatch all the while keeping a keen eye on reducing vulnerabilities to the wildness, beauty, wildlife, and watershed values that should be the driving factor for decision making in the Wasatch. Without legislation, projects will undoubtedly be proposed in the Wasatch, but there will be no certainly for the conservation values. Conservation and watershed protection must be the priority.

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It is unfortunate Alta has chosen a different path, we respect that’s where their company is at and hope that the rest of this legislation will reduce threats to the Wasatch, and help us focus our limited resources and attention on the areas that remain unresolved — like protecting Patsey Marley, Wolverine Cirque, Tuscarora and Catherine Pass from resort infrastructure.

We hope you agree with our direction and the outcome of this legislation. If you do, the most important thing you can do is show your gratitude and appreciation for the leadership of the Central Wasatch Commission, throw your full support behind the Central Wasatch NCRA and let’s get some amazing places protected and issues resolved in one of the most heavily used places in the entire country. It is amazing what people can accomplish when they work together.

Send a note of appreciation to the CWC, this is after all the time of year to give thanks!

I for one am thankful for our board of directors, our dedicated staff and volunteers, to our members, and the broader community who is passionate about the Wasatch. I look forward to working with you all on these issues because no one can go at protecting the Wasatch alone.

Thank you for your efforts and we’ll continue our dogged approach to protecting the Wasatch, we hope we can continue to rely on your support and engagement as we work to introduce and pass this legislation in the coming year.

Currently, Nordic Valley operates as a small, niche ski area on 140 acres. Recently, however, the resort’s new owners, Mountain Capital Partners, announced that they will be seeking a massive expansion including a 4.3 mile gondola, 10 new lifts and large scale condo development. All told, the expansion would spill over onto approximately 3,200 skiable acres of Forest Service managed public land. The majority of this land is managed under the Forest Service’s protected Roadless Area. Remember, according to the current Forest Service Plan, Roadless Areas are to be“… protected and maintained to conserve and preserve important values and benefits.. by prohibiting activities that have a likelihood of degrading desirable characteristics of inventoried roadless areas (Wasatch-Cache National Forest Plan, p. 4-14).”

A quick search online and you’ll find a long history of proposals looking to bring the small ski hill in Eden, Utah onto the national ski industry stage. Plans for lifts and snow making expansion, night skiing operation, access roads, and mountain lodges have come and gone many times. The latest push comes from Mountain Capital Partners, a Colorado based firm, that manages half a dozen resorts in the Southwest, and is by far the most ambitious and impactful to the health and connectivity of the Inventoried Roadless forest.

These forests like many of the Wasatch Range are habitat for a diversity of the wildlife that deserve careful consideration as human populations grow. Various grasses and oak brush give way to maple and aspen groves before reaching the highest elevation playing host to fir trees in the alpine. Prime habitat exists not only for the Big Game species that are so iconic in the west, but also the revered Bald Eagle has been found to inhabit the Lewis Peak region of North Wasatch-Ogden Valley Management Area as prime roost habitat. The Forest Service’s Draft EIS for the area states the “naturalness of the environment is excellent”; this is not describing man made conveyances but rather, the flora and fauna described above along with hundreds –– if not thousands –– of others.

With the last few winters in the Wasatch Range leaving many of us feeling the summer drought and lack of pow days fresh on our minds, we wonder what the aspirations for summer development at Nordic Valley could bring? On page 57 of the Master Development Plan from developer Mountain Capitol Partners, you’ll find a mind bogglingly diverse list of “Multi-Season Guest Experience Upgrades” including alpine slides, slip n slides, mountain coasters, “numerous” zip-lines and much more that would develop land currently home to the diverse wildlife and source of the surrounding communities water.

Save Our Canyons has long fought what our organization has seen as uses that distract from the natural beauty and solitude of the Wasatch. While the user experience may seem subjective to some, zip lines, mountain coasters and the like introduce new challenges to wildlife, impact habitat for plant species and potential water quality concerns.

The Wasatch is a unique range set in contrast to the bustling urban life below. Just minutes from major population centers the area sees some of the highest visitation of any National Forest in the country. Further urbanization, man-made conveyances and resort expansions are being weighed up and down the Wasatch. We encourage you to consider the range not as a fragmented landscape of north, central and south but as a connected ecosystem requiring restraint –– and even space –– to exist without our interruptions.

As this concept moves to formal Forest Service proposal process, Save Our Canyons is working with the surrounding communities and our members to build a coalition to help educate and foster grassroots support for maintaining the integrity of these public lands which currently are free from resort development. If you represent a user group, would like to get your church or school involved or have other skills and volunteer time to participate in this effort please contact our office or email .

You can also join by signing our Stop the Nordic Valley Resort Expansion petition today. 

UPDATE: On Monday, December 11, Save Our Canyons filed a lawsuit against UDOT and the Forest Service challenging the decision to build a gondola in LCC, represented by our outstanding counsel at the public interest law firm Eubanks & Associates, PLLC and with local representation ably provided by Joel Ban. Read our full lawsuit here.

Although we are foremost a public advocacy organization, we felt we had to litigate the gondola decision because:

  • It ignores the desire of the vast majority of citizens NOT to spend enormous sums of tax dollars to construct a blight on one of the most stunning landscapes in our beautiful state.
  • It dismisses your passionate desire—expressed in nearly 50,000 comments—to preserve the beauty and environment of our mountain landscapes that is essential both to life and quality of life.
  • It is a colossal subsidy to two resorts that represent a miniscule portion of the Utah economy and that cater to a relatively small, relatively wealthy set of clients.
  • It is a corrupt gift to a few politically connected businessmen who met secretly with UDOT and ultimately succeeded in causing it to reverse its decision NOT to consider an identical gondola.
  • It plays no part in the comprehensive and integrated transportation system needed for the canyons and entire Wasatch Front, but is a tourist attraction toy sprung from the minds of compliant and careless politicians with naïve, soft-focus images of Zermatt and Chamonix dancing in their heads. 

There has never been an issue that has pierced more deeply into the heart of our mission than this horrific gondola, so there is no choice for us— we MUST stand up against it. 

This lawsuit is an extremely heavy financial lift for us and, from the beginning, we knew we would need your support to help us see this fight through.

So, at this critical time, Save Our Canyons is asking you to donate in support of the wildness and beauty of the Wasatch, and to help us continue to work for pragmatic transportation solutions for the Wasatch that serve all users, all seasons of the year, for generations to come.

DONATING TODAY HELPS TO FINANCIALLY SUPPORT THE LEGAL CHALLENGE OF UDOT’S LITTLE COTTONWOOD CANYON ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT.

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