onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
Reading: Ski Patroller Strike in Telluride Exposes Deepening Crisis in Mountain Resort Towns
Share
onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
Search
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Life
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
  • Advertise
  • Advertise
© 2025 OnlyTrustedInfo.com . All Rights Reserved.
Sports

Ski Patroller Strike in Telluride Exposes Deepening Crisis in Mountain Resort Towns

Last updated: January 6, 2026 6:34 pm
OnlyTrustedInfo.com
Share
8 Min Read
Ski Patroller Strike in Telluride Exposes Deepening Crisis in Mountain Resort Towns
SHARE

A strike by ski patrollers at Colorado’s Telluride Ski Resort has shut down operations during the peak holiday season, spotlighting a systemic crisis where essential workers in some of America’s most expensive towns can no longer afford to live there.

The picturesque slopes of Telluride, Colorado, are silent. For veteran ski patroller Tony Daranyi, a 27-year veteran and certified EMT, the decision to strike wasn’t just about wages—it was about survival. Despite advanced training in avalanche forecasting and mitigation, Daranyi earns approximately $32 an hour, a wage he says is untenable in a town where the average rent is $8,000 a month and the average home value has skyrocketed to $1.5 million.

The walkout, which began on December 27, 2025, has effectively shuttered the resort during its most profitable period. This is not an isolated incident but the latest and most visible symptom of a nationwide affordability crisis hitting mountain communities with particular force.

The Breaking Point: Wages vs. Reality

Telluride ski patroller Tony Daranyi has been pushing for higher wages for a decade. (Handout)
Telluride ski patroller Tony Daranyi has been pushing for higher wages for a decade. (Handout)

Daranyi’s situation exemplifies the core conflict. New patrollers at Telluride start at just $21 an hour. When contrasted with the explosive growth in housing costs—home prices in rural vacation areas like Telluride surged 51% in the three years following the pandemic, according to Harvard University researchers—the math simply doesn’t work for workers.

“Wages haven’t kept up. We’re so far below what it takes somebody in this community to afford either rent or trying to buy even an affordable house,” Daranyi explained. “This is a reflection of what’s going on in all mountain communities, and it’s also a reflection of what’s going on nationwide with income inequality and wealth.”

A Growing Movement Across the West

The Telluride strike is part of a coordinated wave of labor action sweeping through ski country. The movement’s momentum is undeniable:

  • Park City, Utah (2024): A 12-day strike ended with patrollers securing an average $4-an-hour raise.
  • Jackson Hole, Wyoming (2025): Patrollers voted to unionize last fall.
  • Colorado Resorts: Patrollers at Keystone, Eldora, and Arapahoe Basin have also unionized in recent years.

The United Mountain Workers union now boasts approximately 1,000 members, signaling a fundamental shift in the industry’s labor dynamics.

Keystone ski patroller Amanda Kelly has worked at the resort since 2013. (Handout)
Keystone ski patroller Amanda Kelly has worked at the resort since 2013. (Handout)

At Keystone Resort, patroller Amanda Kelly articulated the sentiment driving this movement. “We are like an ambulance on the ski hill that doesn’t charge anything for our services, and some of us are getting paid barely more than an entry-level position,” Kelly stated. “We risk our lives and our bodies, and we require a lot of skill to do what we do, and we’re struggling with even just feeding ourselves day to day.”

The High-Stakes Nature of the Work

A member of the Telluride Ski Patrol clears Revelation Bowl at the end of the day in 2015. (Ralph Lauer / ZUMA Press via Reuters file)
A member of the Telluride Ski Patrol clears Revelation Bowl at the end of the day in 2015. (Ralph Lauer / ZUMA Press via Reuters file)

Ski patrolling is far from a casual seasonal job. Patrollers are highly trained first responders responsible for guest safety, from administering medical aid on the mountain to performing high-angle rescues and conducting avalanche control with explosives. The job carries inherent risks, tragically highlighted last month when Mammoth Mountain patroller Cole Murphy was killed in an avalanche.

This specialized skillset makes patrollers difficult to replace, giving their unions significant leverage. Unlike other resort positions, a patroller strike has the immediate power to halt resort operations entirely, as seen in Telluride and Park City.

The Negotiation Stalemate and Wider Implications

As of January 6, 2026, negotiations between the Telluride Ski Patrol union and resort management remained at a stalemate. The resort had offered an average 13% wage increase for the current season followed by 5% cost-of-living adjustments for the next two seasons—an offer the union rejected nearly unanimously.

The union’s last proposal sought a median wage of $25.50 for new patrollers (up from $21.50) and $36 for advanced patrollers (up from ~$30). Resort owner Chuck Horning has argued that meeting these demands would force a hike in already steep ticket prices, which currently run around $245 for a single-day adult pass.

Park City ski patroller Corlan Williamson was part of a strike for higher wages at the resort last year. (Savannah McCauley)
Park City ski patroller Corlan Williamson was part of a strike for higher wages at the resort last year. (Savannah McCauley)

The outcome in Telluride is being watched closely across the industry. The successful strike in Park City had a demonstrable ripple effect. Patroller Corlan Williamson, who saw his wage rise from $13.25 to around $30 an hour after their strike, noted the change was transformative. “It’s been a pretty big change for people, and definitely a sigh of relief,” Williamson said. “We were getting to a point where we were losing our experience. We’ve been able to build up that experience and knowledge again and retain people.”

A Microcosm of a National Struggle

David Seligman of the workers’ advocacy group Towards Justice frames the issue in broader terms. “What we’re seeing in our mountain communities across Colorado is like what we’re seeing across the country on steroids,” he said.

The struggle of ski patrollers is a stark illustration of a larger economic dilemma: how to sustain a workforce in communities transformed by wealth. The influx of remote workers and second-home buyers post-pandemic has created a scenario where the very people essential to the function and appeal of these towns—the patrollers, the hospitality workers, the service staff—are being priced out of existence there.

The resolution in Telluride will set a precedent. A victory for the patrollers could empower workers in other high-cost resort towns, while a defeat may force a reckoning on how these communities can remain viable for the people who make them run.

For the fastest, most authoritative analysis of breaking sports and lifestyle news, keep your browser pointed to onlytrustedinfo.com.

You Might Also Like

49ers Re-Sign Pro Bowl Special Teams Ace Luke Gifford, Doubling Down on Phase Three Excellence

Grit, Growth, and Guts: Flyers’ Staggering Rally Over Panthers Sends a Message Across the NHL

Patrice Evra: Former Manchester Utd full-back to make MMA debut in Paris event in May | WWE News

The Brooklyn Nets’ Rebuild: Patience, Prospect Power, and the Pivotal 2025 NBA Draft

Kuzmenko’s Breakout Performance Powers Kings Past Wild in Crucial Pacific Division Statement

Share This Article
Facebook X Copy Link Print
Share
Previous Article Byrum Brown Reunites with Alex Golesh: How the QB’s Auburn Move Reshapes the SEC Landscape Byrum Brown Reunites with Alex Golesh: How the QB’s Auburn Move Reshapes the SEC Landscape
Next Article Washington Commanders’ Coordinators Shakeup: Why Kliff Kingsbury’s Exit Signals Major Offensive Reboot Washington Commanders’ Coordinators Shakeup: Why Kliff Kingsbury’s Exit Signals Major Offensive Reboot

Latest News

Tiger Woods’ Swiss Jet Landing: The Desperate Gamble for Privacy and Recovery After DUI Arrest
Tiger Woods’ Swiss Jet Landing: The Desperate Gamble for Privacy and Recovery After DUI Arrest
Entertainment April 5, 2026
Ashley Iaconetti’s Real Housewives of Rhode Island Shock: Why the Cast Distrusted Her Bachelor Fame
Ashley Iaconetti’s Real Housewives of Rhode Island Shock: Why the Cast Distrusted Her Bachelor Fame
Entertainment April 5, 2026
Bill Murray’s UConn Farewell: The Inside Story of Luke Murray’s Boston College Hire
Bill Murray’s UConn Farewell: The Inside Story of Luke Murray’s Boston College Hire
Entertainment April 5, 2026
Prince Harry’s Alpine Reunion: Skiing with Trudeau and Gu Echoes Diana’s Legacy
Entertainment April 5, 2026
//
  • About Us
  • Contact US
  • Privacy Policy
onlyTrustedInfo.comonlyTrustedInfo.com
© 2026 OnlyTrustedInfo.com . All Rights Reserved.