Michigan Is Spending Millions Trying To Refurbish a Ski-Flying Hill. It's Not Working.
Copper Peak revitalization was pitched as an economic development project for the Upper Peninsula, which already has two working ski jumps.

In 1994, Copper Peak, a ski-flying hill located in a remote area of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, hosted its last ski-jumping competition—or so it thought. At the time, the site was $300,000 in debt and needed considerable maintenance to address erosion. There's been no ski flying at Copper Peak for 30 years, but for $25 adults can take an "adventure ride" up the hill to see the 360-degree view. Michigan lawmakers apparently think they can bring the site back to its glory days—in March 2022, they allocated $20 million to revitalize the park in order to "attract international ski competitions and provide sports-related tourism."
Ski flying is like ski jumping but at longer distances. The largest ski-jumping hills used for Olympic competitions are typically between 120 meters and 140 meters; Copper Peak sits at 180 meters. With this unexpected cash infusion, Copper Peak wants to become the only ski-flying hill in the world with surfaces that can be used year-round.
"The western [Upper Peninsula] has been dealt many blows economically for years, the most recent of which was the untimely and unnecessary closure of Ojibway Prison," state Sen. Ed McBroom (R–Waucedah Township) said after approving the massive grant for Copper Peak. But the closure of a prison that employed 200 people and held 1,100 inmates is no justification for pouring millions of taxpayer dollars into a money pit.
Even though the reconstruction plans include keeping the 73-meter tower intact, the rebuilding effort is already hitting roadblocks. The modernization effort has to follow the meticulous guidelines of the International Ski and Snowboard Federation in order to host competitions, which means that the entire landing area will have to be redone. This includes filling the area with concrete and plastic coverings.
A post on Copper Peak's own website already describes delays due to "unexpected factors, including elevated costs, supply chain difficulties, and the impact of inflation," thus requiring "Copper Peak to reevaluate both the project timeline and overall budget." Looks like $20 million wasn't enough.
For a ski-flying hill that was built in 1969 for $1 million (roughly $8.4 million in today's dollars), it seems awfully silly for the state government to pour more than double the site's original cost into its revitalization. Not to mention there are already two other ski jumps in the Upper Peninsula—Pine Mountain and Suicide Hill, which is also the home of the U.S. Ski & Snowboard Hall of Fame and Museum.
By funding the revival of this ski-flying hill, the state of Michigan is hoping it will bring in an estimated $50 million from visitors in the first four years. But the forecasted economic impacts of similar government subsidies rarely come to fruition. If a ski-flying hill needs an injection of government cash to get going, the project may never manage to get off the ground.
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“But the forecasted economic impacts of similar government subsidies rarely come to fruition.”
Hard to keep track when government forecasts are to be trusted. If only there was some sort of pattern to this question.
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Like most government projects, we would be better off if they just took the money, put it in a big pile, and lit it on fire. At least then we would get to watch it burn.
"Hard to keep track when government forecasts are to be trusted."
This is easy to keep track of once you understand that the correct answer is never.
No, no, Mathew. When it supports your preferred narrative it’s to be trusted.
https://reason.com/volokh/2024/02/11/immigration-could-reduce-the-deficit-by-at-least-1trillion-over-the-next-ten-years/
Probably an 8 hour drive from my front door. Not going to go.
It is like the WNBA. Nobody wants it but we have to keep funding it.
Follow the money.
Who gets the 10%?
In this case who gets the 90%? Somebody's brother with a failing contractor business? Somebody's son with a crack and hooker addiction?
Insert Yooper joke here:
Escanaba in da Moonlight.
You guys have it all wrong. Copper Peak just needs to think outside the box. What else can they combine with ski flying that will attract crowds? How about Taylor Swift in a monster truck flying for social justice? With Bud Light as a sponsor.
And a migrant good truck parade.
Taylor Swift Ski flying nude. 🙂
I'm not sure she has the figure for that. She has a pretty face, with makeup, and a decent singing voice with a good band backing her, but I don't see anything else exceptional about her...
Except for the chutzpa required to endorse some man for President after making a living singing about bad choices in men.
Year round is a nice feature, but I'll pay $150k to use MI legislators to test if it can be used in both directions.
But but…Outdoor recreation!
Well, sooner or later all the 'outdoors' will be razed and covered with solar cells.
Try not flying into that windmill when you're ski-flying.
"The western [Upper Peninsula] has been dealt many blows economically for years..."
Stop right there a moment, eh. The glory days ended about 85 years ago when the price of copper fell below what it cost to mine it. That's when a lot of people left the area to head further west. The only way for it to become economically what it was would be for the price of copper to be sky high and make it economically feasible to reopen the mines. I doubt that will happen. Merely rehabbing Copper Peak won't really do much for the area. There are already plenty of skiing options from Mt Bohemia to the Porcupine Mountains.
I have heard of a flea circus, but not skiing flies.
If there are two words that don't belong in the same sentence, it's "skiing" and "Michigan".
*clears throat*
Most teens dream of doing something absolutely epic before going off to college. Madelyn Hendrikse and Braden Dirkse made that dream a reality by water-skiing across Lake Michigan.
WATERSKIIING IS ONE WORD.
THEREFORE THIS LAWSUIT HAS NO STANDING.
They get a hell of a lot more snow than Seattle. Parts of the UP average 210-240 inches a year with years over 300 inches not unheard of. It usually has staying power as well, from September to May, inclusive.
Um... skiing in Seattle.
Also, just so you know, TrollLogic, Seattle gets almost NO snow. But 30 minutes up the road, when you go from 0′ ASL to 4000′ ASL, things change dramatically.
Unless of course you’re talking about snowshoeing and cross country skiing, at that point you’ll get no throat clearing from me. I don’t jog on skis. I let gravity do the work.
What I love about these flatlander back-and-forths reminds me of a great biking thread I read years ago on Reddit. Someone in the thread said, “For anyone who thinks Kansas is flat oughta do the [something something something] bike run.”
The next response was, “For someone who thinks Kansas ISN’T flat needs to do the RAMROD cycling run.”
I spent 6+ at at a ski resort right near Copper Peak. It is minutes from Ironwood. It was very nice and insanely cheap once most of the snow had melted. First couple of times I drove past that ski flying structure on my way to the lake I thought it was some crazy mining ruins. Very nice area. I was there in 2020 at the peak of Covid panic and almost nobody wore masks.
Diane, are you one of those fools that's seen only the southernmost counties of Michigan and assumed the whole state is like that? The central and northern lower peninsula are hilly, and the upper peninsula is mountainous. They aren't high mountains, but they are rugged, and you can measure the lake effect snow by the yard.
Now, I do see a problem with the location, which is near Ironwood, in the farthest west of the UP. Forget about getting Michiganders to Ironwood; it's a 9 or more hours drive from the populated parts of Michigan, assuming there's no line waiting to cross the Mackinac Bridge. Once across the Bridge, there's still 6 hours of 2-lane highway to go - except in ski season, when there's likely to be snow and ice on the roads, and few places you can pass those that are attached to life and slow _way_ down. The scenery is beautiful, but 12 hours of it in one weekend is more than enough. Milwaukee, Chicago, and Minneapolis are closer, but are still long drives, maybe on icy roads.
No, I'm one of those fools that lives where there are actual mountains where people regularly die. Like... regularly.
That looks dangerous. Can you nominate people to try it out?