Oh. My. Gosh. My wife and I were riding above the Deer Valley East Village on the Skyridge, Jordanelle trails the other day, and we saw the size, scope and scale of the Mayflower development. It is not just the Extell and Deer Valley stuff but there are developments above and below the Jordanelle Parkway and housing all around that big, beautiful lake that are just getting started and won’t quit anytime soon. This is not just 7 new chairlifts and a gondola, doubling the skiing at Deer Valley, but there are no less than 8 Linden Cranes over there, raising buildings that will make the new Hyatt appear miniscule. My wife asked, ‘where will the deer go’ and I thought, ‘on the Logo’.
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I was initially, reluctantly optimistic, making the best of
this and looking forward to skiing the additional terrain at Deer Valley. But I think the word is out and people will
come in droves to explore this new skiing with the old Deer Valley
experience. There are parking lots there
but they are full of extra chairlift parts and construction materials. The classic DV parking lot shuttle will have
to loop out to Heber and Midway to gather all the new millionaire customers. I entertained visions of the Mayflower exit
backup to Quinns Junction and the I-80 to U-40 exit ramp back up to Jeremy
Ranch, making a perfect circle of gridlock in our precious valley.
But here I am again, fretting the hypotheticals when the
resorts might entice us to carpool with cookies and coffee, or impose paid
parking so expensive that all day users will park in Coalville, Morgan, Sandy
and Bountiful for the bus trip up. The local,
satellite parking lot locations for day users start to make more sense with
gondolas from Richardson’s Flat to Snow Park and Ecker Hill to 9990 to keep
everyone but the residents and day workers off our roads. This new development is all in Wasatch
County, predicated originally on easy approval and 100 tax free rooms for
military officers. There must be a
master plan and intense coordination and communication between all the regulating
entities and stakeholders, as Tom Clyde continually espouses. Otherwise, this is just insanity.
I fear that this is just another pivot point for the Park
City area, like the opening of PC, DV, 2002 Olympics or the Vail buyout, one
that will put us over the top and off the charts in attraction and
popularity. Couple this timing with the 2034
Olympic Feaver and we have an inflection on our development curve that looks
more like a lightning bolt than a roller coaster. We always said we didn’t want to become another
Aspen but now we are becoming another Vail.
We are building another freeway ski resort and it is not Vail that is
doing it. It is the kinder and gentler
DV. It is us.
I don’t pretend that I have all, or any, of the answers but
we need to get ahead of this before it is too late. The time for action is yesterday, the time
for study and debate is long past. We
know what is happening and we know many of the solutions, low hanging fruit and
easy fixes. This has happened here and in
other places before and we don’t need to reinvent the wheel to solve these issues. Our enemy is delay, inaction or analysis
paralysis. Let’s do something, right or
wrong. We must discover, iteratively, erroneously
and decorously, what works for us. OMG, let’s
do it now, before it is too late.

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