Park City Mountain ski patrollers on Wednesday agreed to a new contract with Vail Resorts. The contract includes pay bumps of ...
in videos posted to social media. Under the new contract, the Park City Professional Ski Patrol Association secured a $2-an-hour pay increase, a $4-an-hour average increase for senior ski patrollers.
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.
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.
The Park City Professional Ski Patrol Association is demanding a $2 per hour increase in their base wage from $21 per hour to $23 per hour. However, a spokesperson for Vail Resorts told T+L that ...
On January 8, Vail Resorts granted the Park City Professional Ski Patrol Association a $2 raise for entry-level patrollers — from a $21 hourly pay floor to a $23 hourly pay floor — and agreed ...
up $2/hr from their current starting point of $21/hr. Vail Resorts is apparently unwilling to meet those demands. Seeing this in the news got me thinking about my own experience with ski patrol in ...
to go on strike against the Aspen Ski Corporation. The prevailing wage at the time, was capped at $2.97 per hour, a ridiculous-sounding number today, although most labor jobs in the summer were paying ...
Vail Resorts, which endured an unprecedented wave of bad PR, says the contract that ended a 12-day patroller strike is consistent with pay for all patrollers. Listen to "Morning Edition" host Michael ...