Medicine Hat News

Colorado ski areas pay record $20M in White River forest

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ASPEN, Colo. Ski areas in Colorado’s White River National Forest paid more than $20 million in fees to the U.S. Forest Service last fiscal year, but none of that money is directly reinvested in maintainin­g the nation’s most-visited recreation forest. The reason: Wildfire. The Aspen Times reports that the fees, paid by 11 ski areas for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, go to a Forest Service that is spending more and more to fight catastroph­ic wildfires. Forest Service officials anticipate that two-thirds of the agency’s entire budget will go to firefighti­ng by 2025.

That leaves less and less for trails, campground­s and other services in the White River, with 2.3 million acres (900,000 hectares), eight wilderness areas and 10 mountain peaks that surpass 14,000 feet (4,200 metres). The forest receives more than 10 million visitors a year.

‘We’re hurting everywhere. More and more is going to fire,” forest Supervisor Scott Fitzwillia­ms said.

White River’s annual budget is about $18 million, compared to more than $30 million in 2009.

None of that $18 million comes from ski areas. About $16 million is appropriat­ed by Congress, and $2 million comes from visitor fees, such as season passes for the Maroon Bells Scenic Area, and fees paid by outfitters and guides conducting commercial trips such as backpackin­g, rafting and horseback riding.

Ski area fees are determined by skier visits, the amount of public land occupied by a ski area, area revenues and other factors. The $20 million is a record for White River, up slightly from the previous fiscal year.

Vail Resorts paid nearly $16 million for four ski areas; Aspen Skiing Co. paid more than $2.4 million for another four. Skico paid $1.6 million for Snowmass and nearly $106,000 for Aspen Mountain, much of which sits on private land.

Efforts to allow national forests to retain ski area fees have lagged. Legislatio­n known as the proposed Recreation Not Red-Tape Act would allow national forests to keep some ski area fees, but it’s not made much progress in Congress.

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