The ski patrol strike at the Park City resort in Utah ended Thursday after the mountain's owners agreed to a wage hike of $2 an hour for 200 union employees.
Members of the Park City Mountain Ski Patrol are now on the 12th day of their strike, and they're unsure of when it will come to an end.
Members of the Park City Council provided input to Mayor Nann Worel as she crafted a January statement about the Park City ...
The labor agreement governing over 200 ski patrol and mountain safety staff expired in April, leading to months of stalled ...
The nearly two-week strike hobbled the largest U.S. ski resort during a busy holiday period and sparked online fury about ...
Mayor Nann Worel said in a statement that she and the Park City Council recognize that resort communities face significant livability challenges, and it is the workforce that all too often shoulders ...
What does it mean for skiers everywhere when patrollers from other Vail-owned mountains are called to cross the picket line?
After a 10-day long strike, the Park City Professional Ski Patrol Association announced a new contract with Vail addressing ...
Vail Resorts, the operating company for Park City Mountain Ski Resort, is offering 50% per-day credits for guests impacted by ...
Only 25 of the 41 lifts are open, and 103 of the 350 trails are available to guests at Park City Mountain as of Monday morning.
Visitors were greeted with long lift lines and minimal open terrain at Park City ski resort when the ski patrol union went on ...
The agreement will likely end the Park City Ski Patrol's holiday strike over inadequate compensation and "bad faith" negotiations.