APNewsBreak: Squaw Valley
announces ski merger
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Squaw Valley USA, the iconic Lake
Tahoe-area resort that has been home to some of the country's top downhill
skiers, is joining operations with neighboring Alpine Meadows in a deal to be
announced Tuesday.
The merger comes as Tahoe resorts and business leaders are
studying a bid for the Winter Olympics, perhaps for the next available Games in
2022. Squaw Valley president and chief executive Andy Wirth is part of that
effort but said it's too soon to tell if the merger will help Lake Tahoe's
effort.
In the near term, he and other resort officials hope the
merger will boost tourism and make the area more attractive to skiers from
abroad and other states.
"For many decades, a great number of people in this area
have seen the benefits of combining Alpine and Squaw Valley," Wirth said.
"This is something that benefits our guests and consumers."
Squaw Valley and Alpine executives told The Associated Press
about the operating agreement in advance of Tuesday's formal announcement. The
merger is expected to be made final before the start of the coming ski season.
Under the deal, Squaw Valley and Alpine Meadows will retain
their identities but be owned and operated by a new parent company called Squaw
Valley Ski Holdings LLC. Squaw Valley owner KSL Capital Partners LLC will
become the majority owner of the new company, while JMA Ventures, which owns
Alpine Meadows, will have an ownership stake.
Between the two resorts, Wirth said guests will be able to
access more than 6,000 skiable acres, providing "more value, more terrain,
more variety." The two resorts are between Truckee and Tahoe City on the
lake's north shore, about 45 miles west of Reno and 100 miles northeast of
Sacramento. They share a common ridgeline but are not connected by ski lifts.
"There's a lot of interest and focus on this
region," Wirth said. "We have an outstanding airport down the road at
Reno; we have a great airport at Sacramento. And there's so much more we think
could be done overall in this region."
Wirth said the resorts will retain their identities and that
no plans are under way to connect them because the common ridgeline is owned
separately.
"While that vision doesn't escape us, we're really
focused on the now," he said.
The merger comes less than a year after Squaw Valley was sold
to KSL, a Colorado-based investment firm. Squaw was founded in 1949 by Alex
Cushing, a legend in the industry for helping launch the sport in the U.S.
after he landed the 1960 Winter Games, the first Olympics to be televised.
Alpine Meadows opened the following year.
Squaw is renowned among expert skiers for its steep chutes
and long runs, most notably KT-22, which features the kind of runs found on
World Cup and Olympic alpine courses around the world. Julia Mancuso, who won
two silver medals at the Vancouver Games, and Jonny Moseley, the 1988 Olympic
gold medalist in moguls, have trained there.
Olympian Tamara McKinney, who won a World Cup title in 1983,
coaches at Squaw. While lesser known, Alpine Meadows has its share of
challenging steeps but is regarded as more laid back and has been popular with
generations of Northern California skiers.
Squaw has about 4,000 acres of skiable terrain. Combined with
Alpine Meadows, the two parks cover more than 6,000 skiable acres across eight
mountain peaks, with a top elevation of about 9,000 feet.
By comparison, Heavenly Ski Resort in South Lake Tahoe has
4,800 aces of skiable terrain while Mammoth Mountain in the Eastern Sierra has
more than 3,500. Vail Ski Resort in Colorado has a total skiable area of 5,289
acres and Whistler Blackcomb in British Columbia claims 8,100 acres.
Squaw Valley also has embarked on a five-year, $50 million
capital improvement plan that will upgrade two chairlifts, create a new village
restaurant and bar, and add services that include a snowboard and demo rental
center, day lodge and family recreation center.
Todd Chapman, president and chief executive of JMA Ventures,
said the transaction was a strategic move as the ski industry moves to offer
customers more amenities. JMA will continue to independently operate Homewood
Mountain Resort on Lake Tahoe's west shore.
Last year, Vail Resorts Inc. acquired Northstar-at-Tahoe
Resort, also in North Lake Tahoe, and announced a $30 million life and village
upgrade. The Broomfield, Colo.-based ski company also operates Heavenly.
Chapman said the transaction came out of the belief by Squaw
and Alpine executives that "there was something better out there that we
could deliver for the customer."
California has the second-highest number ski visits of any
state, according to the National Ski Areas Association, the trade association
for ski area owners and operators. California had 12.2 percent of the nation's
ski visits last year while Colorado had 20.4 percent.
Starting Tuesday, skiers and snowboarders will be able to buy
season passes for the combined resort starting at $439 for adults. The first
season pass will be auctioned on eBay with proceeds benefiting the Humane
Society of Truckee Tahoe.
Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


0 comments:
Post a Comment