Colorado Town Seizing Ski Resort's Land To Stop It Building Employee Housing
The Vail Town Council says that while affordable housing is desperately needed in the community, Vail Resorts' Booth Heights project would threaten local bighorn sheep.

Following months of increasingly contentious head-butting, officials in the mountain town of Vail, Colorado, are moving to seize a property from a local ski resort to prevent it from constructing new housing for its employees.
The property in question is a 5-acre site abutting a frontage road in the eastern part of the 5,600-person ski town. After nearly five years of rezonings, planning, permitting, and litigation, ski resort operator Vail Resorts is ready to move ahead with the $17 million Booth Heights project that would create 165 beds for its work force.
"It's been a multiyear partnership, collaboration, and process to get where we are with a fully entitled and shovel-ready project," says Vail Resorts spokesperson John Plack. "This is private property owned by the company and private dollars that the company is investing into the project."
Plack tells Reason that there's a deficit of some 6,000 beds for the county's work force. The Booth Heights development wouldn't solve that crisis, he says, "but every little bit helps."
Standing in their way is the town of Vail itself, which filed a petition in Eagle County District Court on Friday to invoke its eminent domain powers to seize the Booth Heights site and hold it as open space, Vail Daily first reported.
"It's unfortunate we've come to this place," says Vail Mayor Kim Langmaid of the eminent domain petition.
Vail, Langmaid says, is committed to work force housing and has several public-private partnerships to provide that housing currently in the works. But developing the Booth Heights property would threaten the area's bighorn sheep, who'd be at risk of starvation without that open space, she says.
When the town's last-ditch effort to buy the property for $12 million was rejected by Vail Resorts in early October, Langmaid said they had no choice but to move ahead with eminent domain.
"We've come to the end of our rope. We've tried so hard to find a situation that would accomplish everyone's goals," she says.
It's an about-face from the town government that previously endorsed housing on the site.
In 2017, the Vail Town Council approved Vail Resorts' requested rezoning of its entire 23-acre Booth Heights property. Some 18 acres owned by the company would be zoned for preserved open space, while the other 5 acres would be zoned for work force housing.
Since then, the town's design review board and the planning commission, as well as the town's Council itself, also voted to approve site plans, conditional use permits, and other development plans Vail Resorts needed to move ahead with its project.
In a letter rejecting the town's offer to purchase the site, Vail Resorts COO Bill Rock notes that the town and the company also jointly defended a lawsuit trying to stop the redevelopment of the site that was resolved in the town's favor in October 2020.
"While the Town of Vail has apparently and inexplicably made an about-face in the last several months, Vail Resorts' goal has remained the same for the past five years: to work with the Town to develop affordable housing," wrote Rock.
Langmaid says that the Booth Heights development has long been controversial in the town. Votes to approve the project have generally passed with the slimmest of margins. After the Town Council last voted to approve the project in 2019, a local election flipped the Town Council to a majority that opposed the Booth Heights development, reports Vail Daily.
When the Vail Resorts applied for one final approval from the town's design review board in April, the Council responded by passing a resolution authorizing condemnation and seizure of the property.
And after Vail Resorts received that last needed sign-off from the design review board, making its Booth Heights project shovel-ready, the town passed an emergency ordinance stopping development on the site through the end of November.
Its offer to buy the property was also rejected; the town is now proceeding with eminent domain.
Throughout the process, Vail Resorts has maintained that its project would not harm the area's bighorn sheep. Plack tells Reason the company has committed to paying $100,000 for habitat restoration and would install barriers around its property to prevent residents and pets from interfering with the sheep.
An environmental impact report prepared for the project concluded that it would not harm the area's sheep. Vail Resorts notes in a lawsuit challenging the emergency ordinance stopping construction of its project that the town has approved several large homes within the bighorn sheep's range.
"Why are luxury homes OK," asks Plack. "but affordable housing [is] not?"
Langmaid is dismissive of the company's mitigation measures. Converting the Booth Heights site to housing is still going to eat up needed open space, she says, and no amount of offset payments or fencing is going to change that.
Town residents themselves seem divided on the project. Public comments submitted to the Council when it was debating the use of eminent domain reflect a range of pro- and anti-development views.
"It is obvious that we are in a housing crisis and action needs to be taken immediately. This project is the first piece of what will be a long road to providing more housing opportunities to the workforce of the valley," said one resident opposing the town's seizure of the site.
"First, our wildlife is important to the character and attractiveness of this valley, not the least of which are the sheep," said an eminent domain supporter. "Second, the first view of Vail that visitors (and residents) coming down from Vail pass should see is the current one, not a massive and out of place apartment complex."
Langmaid tells Reason that the town has gone out of its way to identify alternative sites for affordable housing development that could serve Vail Resorts employees without disrupting wildlife. The town spent $2 million relocating a preschool from one site now slated for housing, she notes.
Plack says Vail needs affordable housing now, and it's ready to provide it.
"For us, this option is shovel-ready," says Plack. "A lot of the other options are five-plus years away and have who knows how many obstacles in front of them."
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
The Vail Town Council says that while affordable housing is desperately needed in the community, Vail Resorts' Booth Heights project would threaten local bighorn sheep.
I'm going to keep saying it to you libertarians... when a forward thinking white liberal shows up on your doorstep with a plan to make housing more affordable via upzoning, you have not discovered the left-libertarian alliance.
Yeah, libertarians keep falling for the No Zoning BJ. But I guess a boner is a boner, especially for political incels.
Great article, Mike. I appreciate your work, I’m now creating over $35400 dollars each month simply by doing a simple job online! I do know You currently making a lot (ks-05) of greenbacks online from $28000 dollars, its simple online operating jobs
...
Just open the link——————–>>> http://Www.TopCityPay.Com
I am making 80 US dollars per hr. to complete some internet services from home. I did not ever think it would even be achievable , however my confidant mate got $13k only in four weeks, easily doing this best assignment and also she convinced me to avail.
For more detail visit this article... http://www.Profit97.com
To be fair, Vail views bighorn sheep as far more valuable than the sorts of people who have to (ugh) actually work for a living. These people should have planned ahead and been born to fabulously wealthy parents.
If there's one town in America that could use some Demographic replacement, it's Vail.
You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy
Aspen
You had to go there, didn't you.
I went to see a comedy festival once because a comedian I liked was performing (Dusty Slay, he has a special on netflix now, check him out). I’ve very rarely had such a powerful feeling of not belonging in a place as Aspen.
I’ve very rarely had such a powerful feeling of not belonging in a place as Aspen.
Like me shopping in a Whole Foods?
It's so, so much worse than being in a whole foods. Maybe Telluride is worse, I don't know.
The hotel we stayed at was at a town near Aspen as it was cheaper, and there was a Whole Foods there, and apparently it was there because it was not allowed in Aspen. This is a true story.
Man. That was a weird date.
(Dusty Slay, he has a special on netflix now, check him out)
I will, thanks!
Hilarious! I'm adding him to my Pandora comedy station. Thanks!
I took a professional training class at UC Berkeley once.
just once ... to see if Nicole Eggert could ski
MV
Sheep will not replace us.
We ARE the sheep!
Why? Let the people who live in Vail stay there. Do you want them flooding out across the country instead?
Nothing puts a damper on a fresh powder day like remembering that the poors exist.
Chairman — Like most folks, you don't understand the hedonics of fresh powder. The first people on slopes will always be the working stiffs—whose whole point in being there is to sacrifice everything else in their lives to ski powder. The morning after a fresh powder fall, every business in town will be short of staff—the proprietors expect that. They liberally excuse it; they know what they have to live with to keep the doors open. And they know where all their customers are going to be, too—up on the slopes, not down in the stores. Everything gets back to normal when the sun goes down.
First thought - someone wasn't on the bribe list.
Second thought - According to Darwin, if the loss of five acres will kill off the bighorns, they need to go extinct anyway.
My first thought was that the enviros finally got to the right people with the proper bribes. My second thought was that some rich ahole's view from their deck was going to be spoiled and they finally got the right bribes to the right people.
Third thought -- We were in favor of it as long as we thought it wouldn't happen.
This has nothing to do with bighorn sheep. This is about the vacation home crowd and their resale value. And specifically the ones that are rich enough so don't have to rent out their lodges/etc when they aren't there. As the article cites - the first view of Vail that visitors (and residents) coming down from Vail pass should see is the current one, not a massive and out of place apartment complex. Those people don't want to see reality. They want a magical winter wonderland.
So you mean the value to the town of the tourists and their experience?
No. This is the 48 week per year empty vacation home class at work. Tourists and residents actually tend to know they need housing for the peons who serve them.
JFee — You know what happens those other weeks of the year? A giant housing surplus. Which many of the working stiffs use as a bargain resource. Reliable working tenants can get luxury digs at tiny rents. The owners are happy to have someone in the place, instead of leaving it empty. The working folks know they can always sleep on the floor of the restaurants they work in during the busy season (not just 4 weeks). Or some of them go into the national forest and set up tipis. This has been going on at Rocky Mountain ski resorts for at least 4 decades that I know of.
For once, I absolutely agree with you. Poor people literally can not afford to live in Vail in the first place, which is why they're building essentially corporate housing to be used only during the tourist season for all the workers they only need for part of the year.
The rich assholes that get a say in this don't actually give a fuck if the town needs more housing since they literally don't live there the vast majority of the time. They want to keep housing extremely limited to maintain value and keep the town exactly how it is until they die.
An environmental impact report prepared for the project concluded that it would not harm the area's sheep. Vail Resorts notes in a lawsuit challenging the emergency ordinance stopping construction of its project that the town has approved several large homes within the bighorn sheep's range.
Yeah, that bolded bit there tells you exactly what you need to know.
"They want to keep housing extremely limited to maintain value and keep the town exactly how it is until they die."
A laudable objective.
Colorado is really fcking big.
This is some next level bullshit.
Yes - but Vail (and Aspen) are in narrow valleys, and much of the land is owned by the Feds (the Forest Service). What that means for Vail is a strip maybe a mile or so wide from East Vail to the top of Glenwood Canyon. It’s mostly land that at one time was homesteaded as farmland, since everything else belongs to the Forest Service. West of Glenwood, the forests disappear, and the land opens up a bit, with resort employee housing for Aspen and Vail area ski areas in Rifle and Parachute. Vail to Parachute is over 100 miles. An hour and a half commute in good weather. Longer in bad. Sometimes much longer. Each way. Leadville to the south is closer, but I have been stuck in rush hour traffic on top of Tennessee Pass (luckily in good weather). 10-20 mph in good weather, and ski areas thrive on bad. One way either way windy mountain road, with rare passing lanes. It goes by Camp Hale that was where the 10th Mountain Division trained, before being deployed to Italy, during WW II. At least Rifle and Parachute are on I-70, which is the priority E-W travel corridor through CO, so the snow gets cleared a lot faster there. To the east, on the other side of Vail Pass, is Summit County, with comparable ski area acreage (Copper Mountain, Breckenridge, Keystone, and A Basin, versus Vail and Beaver Creek) and comparable employee housing issues. There ski area employees commute in there from neighboring Park, Lake, Grand, and Clear Creek counties.
Also, keep in mind, it isn’t just people working at the ski areas themselves, but everyone supporting them as well as the tourists. We are talking maids, waitresses, bartenders, convenience and grocery store workers, police, fire, etc. For the most part, VR doesn’t care about them, but they do compete for housing, outside the small amount of employee housing (like this is supposed to be) owned by VR.
Last month i managed to pull my first five figure paycheck ever!!! I've been working for this company online for 2 years now and i never been happier.They are paying me $95/per hour and the best thing is cause i am not that tech-savy, they only asked for basic understanding of internet and basic typing skill.It's been an amazing experience working with them and i wanted to share this with you, because they are looking for new people to join their team now and i highly recommend to everyone to apply...
Visit following page for more information......>>> Topcitypay
Those bighorns are fun to watch. Like mountain goats. But they've got an entire mountain range to play in. Let the people build. Fuck.
They're probably fun to shoot at though I doubt they'd taste very good.
You can hunt them in AZ. Though it's a very limited permit:
https://www.azgfd.com/hunting/species/biggame/bighornsheep/
the sheep said the same about you lol.
Why should I care? They don’t have opposable thumbs.
https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=18xLVQj81vk
Edit: Link is to "Man" by The Presidents of the United States of America.
"But they’ve got an entire mountain range to play in."
Probably not enough. Valleys are important for their range.
This is a perfect illustration of how the environmentalist apologia for urban planning is complete and utter bullshit. The so-called profession of urban planning is a cartel and scam whose real purpose is to keep housing super-expensive forever, to benefit the owners of existing homes at the expense of newcomers and renters. No real libertarian supports the existence of any planning bureaucracy.
And maybe to cut down traffic in ski season, for the people who are already living there and don't understand why the town prospers.
All the actual residents and most businesses were already run out of town due to the expense of living there. Since you can't work in Vail, you can't live in Vail. It's really that simple. All the people who are left are essentially non-residents and big business owners that also don't live there.
It's basically a bizarre modern ghost town for the majority of the year.
Go, JD-Galt, Go!!! Amen, bro or bro-ess!!!
It's not about the sheep. It's about a bunch of NIMBY cunts who don't want the proles living too close to them.
-jcr
This is the correct answer.
Ditto for Martha's Vineyard.
I'm sure there's somewhere they can build the nigger quarters where they'll be out of sight. Maybe underground.
Who else remembers the snotty rich kids in Georgetown fighting to prevent a metro station in their neighborhood?
-jcr
Such a dumb decision. Same asshole shoppers showed up anyway, with the added benefits of clogged narrow side roads and even less street parking.
Is there someone who actually wants the proles living close to them?
There are practical advantages to having serfs live close to where they work.
There are also practical disadvantages. Like for example, that these people are unionized and vote.
So people are using fake ecology concern to disrupt economic development. It sure is nice to see left wingers abused by their own tactics.
Vail Resorts is ready to move ahead with the $17 million Booth Heights project that would create 165 beds for its work force.
Well now we know the story is fake news. 103K per employee? It costs LA at least 300K to house one person.
FWIW Private/Public partnership means public housing. Not as bad as California, give it a chance. Plus, there’s plenty of acreage inside the resort of Vail Village. If it’s that important to the corporation, why not start building inside the resort perimeters?
What does affordable mean? Be specific
Affordable to me would seem to be private businesses like this that want to spend their own money to build housing for employees, GEEZE! What kind of knucklehead politicians would rather spend tax money when you don't have to? A measly 5 acres of land out of 18 and will not build on the other 13. For a win I guess that want to keep all of it now and pay whatever they want for it. Don't ya just love politicians?
Public/Private partnership is not the same as Vail Resorts building housing. It’s the PUBLIC part of the equation
We had a situation like that near me recently. A suburban city council fought to stop a new bus route that would have directly connected the Bad Side of the city to the largest and most popular shopping mall.
A lot of neighborhoods have been ruined because of unfortunate bus routes.
I hope they managed to stop the bus route!
What does affordable mean?
The federal government defines affordable as being able to rent or buy housing for no more that 30% of household income. I would define it as sufficient and sufficiently diverse housing to allow anyone who works full time in a community to be able to live there.
Whose income? 30% of the average Vail income is different than 30% of the poverty level.
Just what it says. 30% of household income. Anyone's household income.
In the real world things actually have prices that are related to the value of the location. It’s unreasonable to go to Vail and say “I work for minimum wage. I demand housing for 30% of my $26,000 income. So it always comes down to “affordable to who?”
Presumably wages in Vail run significantly more than state minimum, but that still doesn't give anyone the "right" to demand housing at any particular price. The limited real estate in Vail is extremely valuable.
Now, the resort wants to keep employees closer -- no doubt to be able to work them more for lower wages (so they don't have to entice employees with wages to make it worth the cost of the long commute.) But the fact is that large amounts of low-income people will negatively affect the town. The politically correct rich liberals in Vail have to dance around that, but I don't.
The 30% ratio has no bearing on the location value of real estate, just whether or not it is affordable to someone. It’s quite possible the attempt to provide worker housing is not a conspiracy to pay workers lower wages or attract additional low wage residents to Vail, but instead to provide an additional benefit to attract the labor they already need to operate the resort, especially in a tight labor market. Everyone seems to agree there’s a housing shortage and a housing affordability problem there.
"The 30% ratio has no bearing on the location value of real estate, just whether or not it is affordable to someone."
*facepalm*
It's also quite likely that they are limited on the employees they can attract at any price being so remote. At some point, money can only entice people so much. I would be willing to seasonally move into a company dormitory for enough dough. However, driving multiple hours each way during daily Colorado winter? That's not only difficult and often dangerous, but sometimes impossible.
The residents of Vail obviously realized that while additional growth may be good for the resort owners, it's not good for the existing community. They're happy with the status quo. I don't blame them.
Why would I want the people who work in my community to live here? Seriously, what benefit is that to me as a home owner?
Right.
5 acres of land wouldn't keep a single bighorn sheep from starving.
And if Vail Resorts were to propose to feed the sheep with bales of hay during the winter, the nannies and the ninnies would DEMAND that Vail Resorts hire ??? 1,000 or more PhD wildlife biologists to "supervise" the feeding of the sheep... Maybe more than that, if too many of the PhD wildlife biologists are of "Team R" ideological flavor... As another commenter (JCR) said, it ain't about the sheep...
Could depend on if it's the most significant undeveloped land between linking their habitat and the easiest way for them to get across.
Nope, on the edge of the range. And miniscule compared to all the luxury homes built in the range.
Pic: https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F36b71668-eb86-46b9-83db-822c09cc1da5_2000x1200.jpeg
Source article: https://www.stormskiing.com/p/if-the-north-pole-treated-elves-like
It could, however, feed millions of crickets.
Heavily Democrat. Need you say more?
I saw a video the other day of a snow leopard taking down a sheep. They must have fallen 1000 feet down the mountain and the leopard never let go. One of the most incredible things I've ever seen.
Park City is likewise in a fight with Vail Resorts. Planned lift upgrades are instead going to a different resort.
NiMBYs of a feather…
Killing the goose that laid their golden eggs.
Not to defend Vail Resorts, but I don't blame them. Park City sucks!
Ski the west side or don't bother going to Utah.
Meh. So this week among Vail elites, virtue signaling for wildlife >> virtue signaling for po peeples.
Yeah, it's a bunch of white leftists slap-fighting with each other. Tell the ski bum workforce they can go live in Leadville with the Mexican immigrants if they want affordable housing.
Leadville doesn't have Mexican immigrants, it has moly miners and it's expensive, too.
Leadville is apparently 25% hispanic. That's higher than the national average.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leadville%2C_Colorado#Demographics
Yeah, and they've been commuting to the ski resorts for decades to work.
Well, if it's been worthwhile for them to do it for decades, then sounds like the cost-benefit works out in their favor, or they wouldn't do it.
If you think this actually has anything to to with Bighorn Sheep, I've got some prime Detroit real estate to sell you.
Fuck the sheep. Wait, that didn't come out right...
Obligatory - Dirty Deeds Done With Sheep
Hold on now...
What’s the difference between Mick Jagger and a Scotsman? Jagger says HEY YOU GET OFF OF MY CLOUD and a Scotsman says HEY MCLOUD GET OFF OF MY EWE!!!
(Hey I can do this with my own ancestry with being kilt for it!)
Like adults chopping off their own private parts, I have no problem with a progressive town doing this to itself.
I think those bighorn sheep need to be relocated to Martha's Vineyard so the migrant workers can sleep in peace.
Give each migrant worker a sheep—don’t forget to wish them FLEECE NAVIDAD!!
The Town Council doesn't want this private project to go ahead because they have "several public-private partnerships to provide that housing currently in the works". So they kill the one project that won't give the city any "partnership" (aka bribes, kickbacks and pork).
Yeah, the resort company might be motivated to choose the most economical builder with sufficient quality. The town council can choose the builder with the best bribes.
It’s the mob movie Casino. VR could take the town to court, but it looks like the town has the power here and is humiliating VR for whatever reason (partnership bribes etc)
Nobody in history who has had to live next to an "affordable housing" development has actually enjoyed the experience.
This is true.
Last month i managed to pull my first five figure paycheck ever!!! I've been working for this company online for 2 years now and i never been happier.They are paying me $95/per hour and the best thing is cause i am not that tech-savy, they only asked for basic understanding of internet and basic typing skill.It's been an amazing experience working with them and i wanted to share this with you, because they are looking for new people to join their team now and i highly recommend to everyone to apply...
Visit following page for more information......>>> Topcitypay
Voters in Vail used democracy to protect their property values. Welcome to America. Property owners recognize that building low(er) income housing in their area will reduce values, if you can convince them otherwise fine. A corporation wanted to build cheap(er) company town housing so it could pay workers less. City approved, then voters concerned about their wealth voted them out. Eminent domain says the company will get fair market value for their property, they just don't get lower cost workers.
I think it’s also about voting. Vail has a population of 4700. Potentially adding 200 unionized service sector workers as town residents could affect local politics significantly.
Eminent domain for esthetic reasons and alleged ecological reasons that are contradicted by a study? Not what that power of government was intended to be used for. Sounds like an abuse of power for less than noble reasons. Kind of why we had a revolution almost 250 years ago.
Another fine example of “Hello, I’m from the government and I’m here to help”.