A Skier Is Suing Vail Resorts
Skiers have filed a class action lawsuit against Vail Resorts, saying they spent thousands of dollars to visit Park City Mountain and Vail Resorts didn’t disclose an ongoing strike or its impacts.
An Illinois man filed a class action lawsuit against Vail Resorts over Park City Mountain's strike-related disruptions, which he called a
Park City Mountain is offering credits to pass holders who faced disruptions during the ski patrol strike. A class-action lawsuit was filed against Vail Resorts for the resort experience during the strike. The disruption was due to a 13-day strike by Park City patrollers over a contract dispute with Vail.
Vail Resorts, the operating company for Park City Mountain Ski Resort, is offering 50% per-day credits for guests impacted by the recent ski patrollers strike that impacted the resort's operations for two weeks.
The mayor of Park City, whoever the incumbent was at any given time, has seemed to be the person Parkites seek out with grievances regarding Park City Mountain and its owne.
Vail Resorts issued its annual early season update to investors on Thursday, reporting that season-to-date total skier visits through Jan. 5
The lawsuit accuses Vail Resorts “intentionally and willfully deceived hundreds of thousands of consumers.” The ski patrol strike at Park City Mountain, Utah, is over, but now a lawsuit has been filed against Vail Resorts for allegedly not disclosing the strike's impacts.
The owner of Park City Mountain is now offering credits toward future purchases to people who skied or snowboarded at the resort during the now-settled ski patrol strike.
From Stowe to Switzerland, Vail Resorts transformed skiing. Now, on one of the busiest ski weekends of the year, customers are pushing back.
A class-action lawsuit has been launched against Vail Resorts after guests to Utah’s Park City Mountain saw their holiday trips impacted by the recent ski patrol strike that closed swaths of terrain and led to hours-long lift lines.
Despite fewer overall visitors and a strike, higher pass prices allowed Vail Resorts to increase its 2024/2025 season lift revenue.