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Pagosa Springs, Colorado
Wolf Creek: Some reasons why locals oppose Red McCombs' Village
by Ian Vance
With all of the controversy surrounding the development of the
Village at Wolf Creek, people may have difficulty in discerning
the underlying reasons why there is so much resistance among locals
on the Pagosa Springs side towards this project. The potential
negative effect on businesses in Archuleta County is in itself
enough to cause worry and opposition from those that depend on
tourism as a financial foundation. More importantly, people are
concerned about the environmental and psychological damage the
advent of a resort such as the proposed Village is likely to cause.
Wolf Creek is a relative anomaly when compared to the rest of
the ski industry of Colorado. Sheltered against an imposing mountain
ridge that makes up part of the Continental Divide, Wolf Creek
on average receives major snowfall accumulation, year after year;
so much so that it proudly touts the moniker “The Most Snow
in Colorado.” Local skiers and snowboarders – and
the tourist hordes arriving from Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico and
Arizona – find that Wolf Creek’s lack of infrastructure
actually affords one the rare pleasure of untracked powder; it
is sometimes possible to find ‘fresh tracks’ days
and even weeks after the last major storm. Compare this to a mountain
resort like Steamboat Springs, which has heavy traffic by way
of its gondola, and the morning after a hard snow-dump, becomes
tracked out within hours. By ten o’clock in the morning,
finding a fresh line in Steamboat’s renowned aspen groves
is essentially a futile pursuit.
Part of Wolf Creek’s charm lies in its rustic appearance,
its lack of a highly developed commerce center and time-consuming
lift lines, its propensity for ‘secret stashes’ and
undiscovered glades. For many locals, Wolf Creek’s low-key
aspect is a direct contrast from the clockwork complexity and
efficiency of major corporation ski resorts such as Vail and Breckenridge,
and a welcome one at that. Thus, the arrival of the Village and
its desired developments are seen as an irreversible change to
what makes Wolf Creek so special in the first place. Many new
lifts would be needed, as would a complete overhaul of the current
infrastructure at the ski-area base. ‘Our’ Wolf Creek,
as it is known today, would cease to exist. The proposals by McCombs
et al threaten the current ski area’s atmosphere of low-key
hospitality, the warmth and human contact that a family-run business
can easily provide, the communication and charm that the corporation
often fails to fully comprehend – for although a façade
of such can be erected, these necessary illusions are quickly
belied by the sheer size and mechanical aspect of a profit-first
oriented community.
Change cannot be prevented: growth is an inevitable result of
this world’s expanding population. Archuleta County and
its surrounding environs have experienced a massive surge of growth
within the last ten years; it is a reflection of the continual
extension of our surrounding world. However, there is a very large
difference between controlled growth – by those who appreciate
what makes this area special in the first place – and unregulated
growth, by those who desire first and foremost the monetary rewards
and ego-enhancement endemic to ‘empire building.’
The representative of Red McCombs, empire-builder extraordinaire,
has already alienated a large segment of this area’s population
with his grandstanding and heedless arrogance, fundamentally depicting
the lack of concern the corporate entity has for the ‘little
man.’ The questionable court decisions in Mineral County,
the suspicious lack of concern for potential environmental repercussions,
and overall the desperate speed these developers have worked at
in order to erect the Village has sparked much of the current
resistance. By displaying all of the dangerous attitudes of unregulated
growth and doing very little to placate the worries of the surrounding
communities, Bob Honts and Co. have caused much concern as to
the intentions of Red McCombs.
Long term residents, such as myself (30 years), do not wish for
this isolated part of the Rocky Mountains to turn into another
Summit County, or worse an Aspen, with the subsequent rise in
the standard of economics to such a point that we can no longer
afford to live in the area we like to call home. By attempting
to work with the surrounding communities, and respecting the living
conditions and needs of those who chose to live here, The Village
might have found its construction unhindered by multiple lawsuits
and public outcry. Elderly ‘empire-builders,’ by nature,
are in a rush to complete their vision as quickly as possible,
and they like to display their proposed empire to the fullest
extent; perhaps if Mr. Honts / McCombs had started smaller, with
the concept of future growth on the back-burner, they wouldn’t
have estranged potential support from this community. By ignoring
these repercussions, be it out of greed or ego, they have instead
caused the very quagmire they now find themselves struggling to
escape from.
History is rife with similar examples of hubris and folly –
and, as the famous proverb goes, those that do not learn from
history are forced to repeat it, time and time again.
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