Regina Leader-Post

MISSION RIDGE TO OPEN

Ski hill has COVID restrictio­ns in place

- EVAN RADFORD eradford@postmedia.com Evan Radford is the Leader-post's reporter under the Local Journalism Initiative.

Fort Qu'appelle's Mission Ridge ski park is hoping everything goes downhill, in the most normal, alpine way possible.

The longtime downhill ski and snowboard resort is to open Dec. 19 with several new restrictio­ns aimed at cutting the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Among those rules are mandatory face coverings indoors and outdoors and no group lessons larger than a single-family unit.

In a Nov. 26 update on its website, the ski resort said it picked Dec. 19 “given the most recent announced restrictio­ns from the Saskatchew­an Health Authority (SHA) and the marginal temperatur­es that have prevented us from making snow.”

Business manager Anders Svenson didn't respond to requests for comment for this story.

The resort's online statement said it co-developed a document with other ski resorts across the continent called Ski Well Be Well. It “will be the standard at every resort in North America.”

The document says, among other items, resorts are to follow local health authority guidelines specific to each locale.

For Mission Ridge, it's asking guests and staff to wear masks or face coverings all the time. Ski or snowboard school lessons are by-appointmen­t only for individual­s or family-only cohorts.

The resort isn't recognizin­g medical exemptions for skiers or snowboarde­rs unable to wear a mask.

“If a mask cannot be tolerated, it is strongly recommende­d that public spaces be avoided,” the statement said, adding guests are to maintain a two-metre distance between each other.

“Not everyone will agree with our plan. Some may feel that our approach is too aggressive while others may feel it is too moderate.

We recognize that some of these changes will be inconvenie­nt yet we ask for your patience and understand­ing as we navigate these times together,” the statement said.

Indoor spaces at the resort, like its rental shop and lift-pass purchasing area, will use single-direction traffic flow procedures; its bar and eatery require face covering all time, except when a person is eating or drinking.

Rentals for gloves, jackets, pants and goggles aren't allowed; staff will rent out equipment like skis, boots and snowboards, disinfecti­ng them after each rental. The online statement didn't mention helmets.

The COVID-19 pandemic has also forced the Regina Alpine Race Team to adjust training for its approximat­ely 60 athletes.

“A huge amount of revamping from the club's organizati­on and coaches,” vice-president Colleen Silverthor­n said.

They're renting “box modular units” as warm-up stations “to put our athletes in so they will be socially-distanced,” she said as an example.

When Mission Ridge opens, the race team will start using them, hoping to “take pressure off the clubhouse … so we're not contributi­ng to a crowded situation.”

She said the teams looks forward to when Mission Ridge does open so it can hit the slopes for the first time.

“We support their plans to get fully operationa­l and adhere to any of the guidelines that are being imposed on businesses and ski resorts … Mission Ridge has done a ton of work.”

For now, the alpine racers are doing dry-land training at Regina's Level 10 Fitness. The team has had to cut its interprovi­ncial travel, which would have taken it to the Rockies in Alberta and British Columbia for early-season training.

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 ?? MICHAEL BELL/ FILES ?? Mission Ridge is to reopen Dec. 19. It has adopted mandatory face coverings inside and outside, among other restrictio­ns.
MICHAEL BELL/ FILES Mission Ridge is to reopen Dec. 19. It has adopted mandatory face coverings inside and outside, among other restrictio­ns.

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