Each week we speak with our colleagues at The Colorado Sun about the stories they're following. This time, we hear from The Sun鈥檚 rural economic development reporter, Tracy Ross, about ski resorts that provide and a false correlation between increased and lower drought risk.
A new trend is emerging among Colorado ski resorts in their efforts to retain employees: building housing. Ross wrote recently about what Colorado's Winter Park Resort is doing.
鈥淭hey are about to start construction on two buildings鈥攖hat are costing them $60 million and will house 330 people鈥攔ight at the base of the resort,鈥 she said.
Ross told KUNC it hasn鈥檛 been easy for some resorts to house workers. They face hurdles like land availability, money and conflicts with municipal officials.
In Vail, for example, Ross said the local resort company has faced some pushback.
"The town council voted to keep Vail Resorts off a parcel it wanted to build on in order to protect bighorn sheep habitat," Ross said. "Brian Elliott, who's the chief development officer for Altair, told me some places where the company has resorts, the communities they're linked to aren't necessarily cooperative."
In other news, the snowpack that much of Colorado has received lately is good for ski resorts鈥攈ence the need to hold onto employees鈥攂ut Ross said water officials still can't relax.
鈥淎lthough we're having an amazing season of snowfall and that's incredible, the Colorado River Basin is still in a 23-year megadrought,鈥 Ross said. 鈥淭he big important reservoirs for the West, Lake Powell and Lake Mead, are running short on water savings if they fall too low.鈥
The reservoirs can't produce hydroelectric power or release water to downstream users if levels are too low鈥攁nd they're still low, despite the hefty snowfall. Ross said the good news is that the additional snowpack means Colorado reservoirs will likely see some recovery this year.
鈥淲ater leaders just want to warn people not to get too excited about this snowfall because there are still big, big problems with the water that is in the big basins,鈥 Ross concluded.