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Expansion hints at the future for Lookout Pass Ski and Recreation Area

Can a growing ski resort on the border of Montana and Idaho hold onto that small-resort charm?

By Eli Francovich, The Spokesman-Review
Published: December 31, 2022, 8:47pm
4 Photos
Mathew Sawyer, the communications director for Lookout Pass, takes a photo of some of the first four riders up the new Eagle Peak chairlift on Dec. 17, 2022. The total vertical descent from the top of the new chair is 1,650 feet.
Mathew Sawyer, the communications director for Lookout Pass, takes a photo of some of the first four riders up the new Eagle Peak chairlift on Dec. 17, 2022. The total vertical descent from the top of the new chair is 1,650 feet. (Eli Francovich/Spokane Spokesman-Review/TNS) (Eli francovich/The Spokesman-Review) Photo Gallery

SPOKANE — While some had waited in line for more than two hours for the new chairlift to open, no one was unhappy on Dec. 17 at Lookout Pass Ski and Recreation Area.

It was a sunny, pleasant day to stand in the snow. But the enjoyment came more from anticipation than from Vitamin D.

“I’ve been staring at Eagle Peak for four years,” Jerry Compton said. “I can wait.”

Compton was one of the first four people to load a new chairlift at Idaho’s Lookout Pass on the border of Montana and Idaho. Chair 5 rises 1,380 vertical feet over a 1-mile span, depositing skiers and boarders at the top of 6,160-foot Eagle Peak, 500 feet higher than before. The chairlift was originally owned by Robert Redford and serviced Sundance Resort, where it was called Ray’s Lift.

The project has been two decades in the making, market director Matt Sawyer said, and will add 500 acres of skiing, effectively doubling the size of the resort. Resort owners had to come to a lease agreement with the U.S. Forest Service, which owns the land. The expansion was officially approved by the Forest Service in 2017, and the new runs were cut last year.

The new terrain is steeper and longer than anything else at the resort, and on Dec. 17, the powder was deep, leading to plenty of whoops.

But before the shredding, there was an opening ceremony featuring speeches from Sawyer, general manager Brian Bressel and George Bailey, the owner of Regent Reality out of St. Regis, Mont. All spoke about the complexity of expanding the ski area, particularly on Forest Service land. Bressel credited the Forest Service for working cooperatively with the resort.

Economic development

Bailey’s comments, however, addressed the crux of the matter: the economics.

“Talk about economic development,” he told the line of about 100 skiers and boarders waiting for the first chair. “These guys (Lookout Pass), with the Hiawatha Trail and up here, they put 200,000 user days. Do the math on that.”

Bailey, board chairman of the St. Regis Resort District, has done the math. Five years ago, the Resort District received $200,000 in tourism-related taxes. (Montana law allows communities with less than 5,500 people that meet certain qualifications to implement a sales tax on tourism-related spending.)

This year, the district is set to get $400,000. That’s big money for a town of less than 300 people (although the district area is larger).

“We’re able to do all these great things for the people in St. Regis, bringing in broadband internet and stuff,” Bailey said. “But we couldn’t do it without Lookout.”

The Eagle Peak expansion will only increase user days and, by extension, money spent. Lookout Pass has been known for decades as a mom-and-pop stop with relatively few services, at least in the hyperinflated world of ski resort amenities, and not all that much terrain.

What, then, was the draw for Lookout lovers? Cheap tickets and world-class snow.

Bressel assured those present Dec. 17 that the ticket prices, and more important the character, of the resort won’t change.

“Really, truly, this is something that is not changing Lookout,” he said. “We are still about who we are — our values.”

History and economics tell a different story. The annals of skiing are full of mom-and-pop resorts that at some point scaled up, arguably losing their character. Vail and Tahoe are examples.

Something of the sort is happening in the Spokane region as the area’s population continues to grow, putting more pressure on area resorts to expand, modernize and offer swank amenities — all which comes at a price.

Of course, there are geography-given limitations. It’s hard to imagine Lookout Pass becoming a destination ski area in the way Tahoe is (although Lookout’s consistently good snow will become a hotter amenity if climate change models prove accurate).

Still, Lookout growing while maintaining its small-resort character seems impossible. Outdoor recreationists have to wrestle with the fact that the sports and activities we love for their remoteness, solitude and beauty don’t scale well.

Some not-in-my-backyard Idahoans and Washingtonians would like to magically reverse this trend. That is both unfair and unlikely.

And so we’re left with a conundrum and no magic bullets.

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