Jay Peak Resort Explained

Jay Peak Resort
Location:Jay, Vermont
Nearest City:Burlington, Vermont
Coordinates:44.9294°N -72.5322°W
Status:Operating
Owner:Pacific Group Resorts
Vertical:2153feet
Skiable Area:385acres
Number Trails:81
Longest Run:4.828km (03miles)
Liftsystem:9 (1 Aerial tramway, 6 chairs, 2 surface lifts)
Snowfall:359inches
29.9feet

Jay Peak Resort is an American ski resort located on Jay Peak in the northern Green Mountains, between Jay, Vermont and Montgomery Center, Vermont. Its vertical drop of 2153feet is the eighth largest in New England and the fifth largest in Vermont.[1] Although mostly located in the town of Jay, part of the resort, including the summit of Jay Peak, the Jet Triple Chair area, and much of the Big Jay backcountry descent, is located in the town of Westfield, Vermont, to the south. The northernmost part of the resort is just 4 miles (6.5 km) south of the Canada–United States border, above which is the Province of Quebec.

The resort opened for skiing in 1957 and later expanded to year-round activities. The mountain offers 81 trails served by nine lifts. It receives the most snowfall of any ski area in the Northeastern U.S.[2] and is known for its gladed skiing.

In 2008, Jay Peak Resort was purchased by a group of investors headed by Ariel Quiros and the resort's CEO, Bill Stenger. They raised money from EB5 investors and undertook a major expansion of the resort's facilities, adding, among other things, new hotels, condos, an ice rink and a water park. In 2016, Jay Peak and another Vermont mountain, Burke Mountain Ski Area, were seized by U.S. government officials amid investigations regarding fraudulent offerings of securities.[3] Quiros and Stenger pleaded guilty and received prison sentences.

The resort was operated under US government receivership for more than six years, and in 2022 it was purchased by Pacific Group Resorts, Inc., with proceeds going to the defrauded EB5 investors.[4]

History

First half century

Jay Peak was incorporated by Harold Haynes in 1955.[5] That same year, the resort purchased its first ski lift, a T-bar, and in January 1957 it opened for skiing.[6] Many ski trails were carved into the mountain during the 1950s by its first ski school director/general manager, Walter Foeger, an Austrian and former racer who had previously trained the Spanish Olympic ski team.[7] In 1968 Weyerhaeuser invested $300,000 in the predecessor organization, Jay Peak, Inc., and loaned it $2.2 million. A 48-room hotel was built in the mid-1970s.[8] In 1978 Mont Saint-Sauveur International, a Canadian firm, bought the resort.[9]

In 2006, the resort employed 550 people in the winter, 100 in the summer.[10] The following year, the resort agreed to pay the State of Vermont $105,000 for violating stormwater rules in polluting a stream while building a new golf course.[11] Despite a drop in skier visits statewide during the 2006–2007 season, Jay Peak saw a record year with skier visits up 7%.[12] In 2007–2008, the resort reported a record 320,000 skiers for the winter.[13] In 2008, it was the second biggest employer in the area.[14] In 2008, the resort was valued by the town of Jay at slightly over $12 million.[2]

EB-5 fraud; water park, ice arena, hotel and other improvements

By 2008, the resort's owner, Mount Saint-Sauveur, began an EB-5 visa program to finance development.[15] That year, a group headed by Miami businessman Ariel Quiros and the resort's CEO, Bill Stenger, purchased the resort.[16] Before the purchase of Jay, Quiros claimed that he needed to verify the existence of the $18 million already raised by Mount Saint-Sauveur through the EB-5 program. He persuaded the sellers to put the funds into an account at Raymond James Financial, which employed his son-in-law, who helped to retitle the accounts in Quiros' name immediately before the closing of the sale of Jay. They transferred the funds to other accounts, misusing the EB-5 funds to pay part of the purchase price; they used more EB-5 funds raised later to complete the payments owed to Mount Saint-Sauveur.[16]

The new resort company's plan was to invest $100 million in capital improvements for the resort over the next few years.[17] The resort company raised $250 million by 2010, for improvements at Jay and other nearby projects and purchases, including Burke Mountain Ski Area, from 250 investors from 43 companies through the incentive of the EB-5 program. Under this visa program, every $500,000 invested in the U.S. that results in ten new jobs gains the investor permanent U.S. residence.[2] [18] Separately from that program, but as part of its ongoing planning, the resort engaged in a three-way swap with the State of Vermont in 2010. The State deeded to the resort. The resort relinquished its lease to a parcel of nearby undeveloped forest back to the state and sold to the Green Mountain Club to ensure that the nearby of Long Trail would have a permanent buffer from ski-area development.[19]

In 2010, $13 million worth of improvements at Jay were completed including an indoor ice arena, a parking garage, an enclosed beginners surface lift, and a new RFID ticketing system. The old Hotel Jay was razed and replaced with a new 170-room hotel.[20] The new facilities also include a spa, conference center, movie theatre and 33000square feet water park.[8] [21] Also in 2010, Yankee magazine named Jay as the best ski resort in New England.[22] In 2011, the resort agreed to pay an $80,000 fine to the United States Environmental Protection Agency for filling in of wetlands to construct a golf course in 2004–2006, without a permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. This was the same event for which the resort had paid a fine to the state in 2007.[23] Over the ensuing years, the resort repeatedly postponed plans to expand its skiing terrain to a new area to be known as the West Bowl; it is not clear whether the resort ever obtained the support of the state to conduct the necessary cutting and construction in the forest.[24]

By 2014, some EB-5 investors had complained to the Vermont Department of Financial Regulation (DFR) and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) that the resort company had abruptly reclassified their investments. The investigators found the resort company's answers to their questions about the use of the funds to be evasive. They eventually found that Quiros had diverted millions of the dollars raised for his personal use and that Stenger had lied to investors and the SEC about, among other things, the status of some of the construction projects, some of which were never built, including a biotechnology plant in Newport, Vermont.[16] [25]

On April 14, 2016, Jay Peak and Burke Mountain were seized by U.S. government officials.[3] [26] [27] The resort remained operational under management of an SEC-designated receiver, Michael Goldberg, and acting CEO Steve Wright, who was previously Jay Peak's marketing director.[16] On January 15, 2019, Goldberg announced that the resort had been offered for sale.[28] The SEC recovered $81 million from Quiros (including the ski area assets), who pleaded guilty in 2020 to federal crimes including wire fraud, money laundering and obstructing investigators.[16] He was sentenced to five years in prison.[29] Stenger cooperated with the investigation and pleaded guilty in 2021 to supplying false statements to federal investigators.[16] He was sentenced to 18 months in prison (but served 10 months) and a further 3 years of home confinement,[30] and he was fined $250,000.[25] [31] A third conspirator, William Kelly, also received fines and a prison sentence.[29] Raymond James Financial paid a $150 million settlement for its part in the fraud.[32]

2022–present; purchase by Pacific Group Resorts

As of 2022, Jay Peak employed more than 1,200 people in the winter and about half that number year-round; profits increased, during the receivership, from $2 million to $10 million annually.[16]

In September 2022, after operating the resort for more than six years, Goldberg conducted an auction of the resort in which the winner was Pacific Group Resorts, Inc. of Park City, Utah, with a bid of $76 million.[33] [34] The sale was approved by the federal court, which ordered that approximately $70 million of the purchase funds were to be distributed to the defrauded EB-5 investors, representing about 40% of their original investments.[35] The transaction was completed in November 2022.[4] Pacific stated that it had no plans to make "major changes" to winter operations at the resort.[34]

In February 2024, five Jay Peak Resort employees working in the water park under the J-1 visa program were fired by the resort after posting a photo of themselves on social media wearing home-made Swastika armbands and giving a Nazi salute.[36]

Trails and lifts

As of 2024, the mountain offers 81 trails covering nearly of skiable terrain.[37] About two dozen of these are off-piste tree-skiing areas, or glades, covering approximately .[38] Jay Peak is home to the "Face Chutes," arguably the most challenging and steepest marked terrain in the east with an average slope of 56.5 percent (almost 30°) and a maximum slope of 73.9 percent (37°).[39] The "Face Chutes" consist of four skiable lines, the most challenging being the 3 lines to skier's right, all of which are extremely narrow and include a mandatory cliff drop. The ski area is known for its gladed skiing.[16]

Jay Peak has a lift fleet consisting of an aerial tram, six chairlifts[40] and two magic carpet surface lifts. It is one of two ski resorts on the east coast that has and aerial tram, the other being Cannon Mountain in New Hampshire.[41]

Lift Name Type ManufacturerBuilt Vertical
Length
Notes
Aerial Tram Tram 60 1966 1,969 7,779 Cabins were replaced in 2000; it was retrofitted in 2017.
Flyer Express Quad 1999 1,620 7,350 The Flyer is the only detachable quad on the mountain.
Bonaventure 1987 1,340 4,650
Metro 2002 486 2,855 Relocated from Sugarbush Resort in 2002.
Taxi 2012 325 1,756
Jet Triple 1985 1,160 3,500
Village Double 1995 331 2,371 Relocated from Camelback Mountain in Pennsylvania.

The mountain has a total uphill capacity of approximately 12,820 skiers/hour. The oldest of the lifts, the 60-person aerial tramway, also known as the "tram", is the only one of its type in the State of Vermont. This tramway was originally installed in 1966 by Von Roll and upgraded in 2000 with new cabins from Garaventa.

In 1985, the resort purchased the Jet Triple chair from Doppelmayr to replace a T-Bar. This was followed in 1987 with the purchase of the Bonaventure Quad which replaced a double chairlift.[40] In 1999 the resort removed the Green Mountain Double chair, which had serviced the north side of the mountain for 30 years, and replaced it with the Green Mountain Flyer[40] (dubbed the "Green Mountain Freezer" by skiers because of its notoriously cold ride due to the strong winds blowing on it),[42] the mountain's first high-speed detachable chairlift. The other five lifts serve the lower mountain terrain.[43]

In May 2016 the state raised concerns over the safety of the aerial tramway, which resulted in $4.5 million worth of electronic upgrades and carriage overhauls. The capacity of the two tram cars was reduced from 60 to 45 at this time.[44] [45]

To gain access to the lifts, an RFID system scans a chip embedded in a plastic card which is typically held in the skier's pocket.[20]

Snowfall

The summit is at an elevation of 3,968 feet (1,209 m), with a 2,153 foot (656 m) vertical drop. Jay Peak has the largest average annual snowfall of any ski area in Eastern North America. The resort states its annual snowfall at 359 inches (9.1 metres),[37] while the Zrankings ski resort data site calculates it at 322 inches, excluding October and May snow, writing: "Jay Peak's location near the northern tip of the Green Mountains and its proximity to large bodies of water means it often catches moist air. As this moist air is forced upwards by the mountain's topography, it cools and condenses, leading to snowfall, a process known as orographic lift.[46]

Other facilities

The resort has two base lodges and a small lodge at the summit where the aerial tram terminates. There are also hotel facilities and a large number of ski-in/ski-out condominium units on the lower part of the mountain.[8]

Features at Jay include a league-sized hockey rink, the Ice Haus, with room for 700 spectators. Next to it is a 220 space parking garage, where 80% of the slots are covered. In 2011, an indoor water park named The Pump House opened. It features the longest "lazy river" in Vermont.[47] The resort also has a cross-country ski center, a recreation center with climbing walls and a movie theatre, athletic fields, and an 18-hole golf course.[34]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://verticalfeet.com/ Accurate Ski Resort Ranking with monthly updates
  2. News: Gresser, Joseph . Jay expansion projects still on track . the Chronicle . July 2, 2008.
  3. https://www.sec.gov/litigation/complaints/2016/comp-pr2016-69.pdf Official Case Documents case: 16-21301 from SEC
  4. https://www.wcvb.com/article/utah-based-company-completes-purchase-of-jay-peak-their-second-resort-in-new-england/41854070# "Utah-based company completes purchase of Jay Peak, their second resort in New England"
  5. Web site: TOLAND . JJ . The storied history of Jay Peak Resort . 2023-10-05 . Burlington Free Press.
  6. Hayes . Lloyd T. . March 2009 . Jay Peak's Beginning . Vermont's Northland Journal . 7 . 12 . 14.
  7. Web site: Soden . Bob . Vermont's Jay Peak . SkiingHistory.org . International Skiing History Association . 24 February 2020.
  8. News: McLean, Dan . New Jay Peak owners plan $100 million in upgrades . Burlington Free Press . July 2, 2008.
  9. News: McLean, Dan . Investors purchase Jay Peak . Burlington Free Press . July 1, 2008.
  10. News: Voters approve sewer expansion - Jay Peak will pay most of local cost . the Chronicle . August 29, 2007.
  11. News: Jay Peak to pay $105,000 for violating stormwater rules - Boston.com.
  12. News: Wright, Leslie . Resorts log worst winter in 12 years . Burlington Free Press . June 7, 2007.
  13. News: Gresser, Joseph . Jay Peak president has big plans . the Chronicle . May 14, 2008.
  14. News: Gresser, Joseph . After much anticipation, career center expansion opens . the Chronicle . October 22, 2008.
  15. News: Joseph . Gresser . SEC wins early victory against Quiros . The Chronicle . Barton, Vermont . 28A . December 3, 2016 .
  16. Cutts, Joe. "Kingdom Come and Gone", Ski Magazine, vol. 86, issue no. 4, January 2022, p. 75
  17. Web site: Jay Peak resort sold to president, investors . July 3, 2008.
  18. News: Pat . Williams . Jay Peak launches phase two . Burlington Free Press . Burlington, Vermont . 1C . 8 July 2010.
  19. News: Nancy . Remsen . Jay Peak swap OK'd . Burlington Free Press . Burlington, Vermont . 1B . 1 September 2010 .
  20. News: Jay Peak guests will see $13 million in improvements . The Chronicle . Barton, Vermont . 29 . 1 September 2010 .
  21. http://www.jaypeakresort.com/pumphouse/waterpark "Pump House Indoor Waterpark"
  22. News: NEK establishments listed in Yankee's best of NE awards . The Chronicle . Barton, Vermont . 7 . 3 February 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100612152215/http://www.yankeemagazine.com/issues/2010-01/interact/10things/readers-choice . 12 June 2010 .
  23. News: Jay Peak pays EPA fine for violation . the Chronicle . Barton, Vermont . 15 . October 5, 2011 .
  24. Web site: Jay Peak Owners Announce $500 Million Economic Revitalization Initiative . https://web.archive.org/web/20121130211551/http://www.pitchengine.com/jaypeakresort/jay-peak-owners-announce-500-million-economic-revitalization-initiative . 2012-11-30 . Jay Peak Resort . October 1, 2012 . November 11, 2019.
  25. Rathke, Lisa. "Ex-ski resort executive gets 18 months in failed visa plan case", Boston Globe, April 14, 2022
  26. Web site: SEC Case Freezes Assets of Ski Resort Steeped in Fraudulent EB-5 Offerings. 2016-04-14. www.sec.gov.
  27. D'Ambrosio, Dan. April 25, 2016. Court-appointed manager scrambles to save ski resorts. Burlington Free Press.
  28. Web site: Jay Peak is officially for sale. Can it grab the $250M needed to pay back investors? . Burlington Free Press . live . https://archive.today/20191112014457/https://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/story/money/2019/01/15/jay-peak-now-sale-can-go-250-million-repay-investors/2528411002/ . November 12, 2019 . November 11, 2019.
  29. Rathke, Lisa. "Former Jay Peak, Burke owner Ariel Quiros sentenced to 5 years in Vermont's largest fraud", Burlington Free Press, April 29, 2022
  30. McQuiston, Timothy. "Bill Stenger back home after release from prison", Vermont Business Magazine, March 22, 22023
  31. Stenger claimed that the State of Vermont had culpability in the fraud. See Guessferd, Christina. "Ex-Jay Peak president claims the State of Vermont 'covered up' Kingdom Con", WCAX, February 3, 2023; and Galloway, Anne. "Bill Stenger: SEC gave state regulators advance warning about Jay Peak fraud", VT Digger, April 17, 2023
  32. Web site: $150 Million Settlement Reached to Reimburse Jay Peak and Burke Mountain Creditors. governor.vermont.gov. April 18, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170419002658/http://governor.vermont.gov/press-release/150-million-settlement-reached-reimburse-jay-peak-and-burke-mountain-creditors. April 19, 2017. live. mdy-all.
  33. Rathke, Lisa. "Winner of auction to buy Vermont's Jay Peak Resort announced", WMUR-TV, September 8, 2022
  34. https://vermontbiz.com/news/2022/september/08/jay-peak-resort-sold-auction-76-million "Jay Peak Resort sold at auction for $76 million"
  35. Keays, Alan J. "As judge OKs $76 million sale of Jay Peak Resort, receiver says Burke Mountain Resort could soon be sold", VTDigger.org, September 16, 2022
  36. Web site: Bewlay . Sid . February 6, 2024 . Jay Peak Resort fires five employees after antisemitic image posted on Instagram . February 9, 2024 . WPTZ.
  37. Web site: The Mountain . 2022-05-09 . jaypeakresort.com.
  38. http://www.jaypeakresort.com/attachments/entries/TrailMapOnly_12+13_Lo_2.jpg "Jay Peak 2012–2013 Trail Guide"
  39. Web site: Nor'Easter Backcountry: How Steep Is It?. Andy. Randonnee. 2011-01-03. Nor'Easter Backcountry.
  40. Web site: Jay Peak, VT . April 16, 2018 .
  41. Web site: Koziol . John . July 22, 2021 . Federal funds eyed for Cannon Mountain tramway makeover . May 7, 2024 . UnionLeader.comn.
  42. Web site: Jay Peak, Vermont: Mountain layout – Skiing . www.skisnowboard.com. https://web.archive.org/web/20051103005646/http://www.skisnowboard.com/jaypeak/layout.html . 2005-11-03. dead.
  43. Web site: Trail Map . https://web.archive.org/web/20120805192239/http://www.jaypeakresort.com/skiing-riding/the-mountain/trail-map . 2012-08-05 . Jay Peak Resort . November 11, 2019.
  44. Web site: Jay Peak Aerial Tramway. www.skiresort.info. 2019-02-19.
  45. Web site: Jay Peak's tram can't run before $4.5M upgrades. Burlington Free Press. 2019-02-19.
  46. Steiner, Christopher. "Best Snow in Vermont – Right Now and Historically" "Snow Ranking Calculus", Zrankings, November 13, 2023
  47. Web site: Levine . Arthur . The Pump House - Indoor Water Park at Vermont's Jay Peak . 11 July 2012 . March 26, 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130326131405/http://themeparks.about.com/od/findindoorwaterparks1/p/Jay-Peak-Water-Park.htm . dead .