- The Forest Service approves three lift projects at Taos, including a base to base gondola.
- Red Lodge Mountain reopens all lifts except the Triple Chair involved in last month’s fatal incident.
- The widow of the man killed at Red Lodge hires a law firm and engineer to look into the circumstances.
- Telluride Ski Resort declines to help fund a new Mountain Village gondola so the town looks to pass a lift ticket tax.
- Powder Mountain to construct a new lift in Wolf Canyon/DMI.
- A child falls from a lift at Park City.
- An urban gondola is floated in Denver.
- Cataloochee, North Carolina lists parts from the Omigosh double for sale.
- New York’s state-owned ski areas report visitation up over 3 percent this season with revenue up more than 8 percent.
- Black Mountain, New Hampshire delays going to a co-op model, will continue to be run by Indy Pass for now.
- Whaleback, NH passes $100,000 toward its goal of $250,000 to continue operations.
- The Caribou-Targhee National Forest weighs whether to change its forest plan to accommodate Grand Targhee’s proposed South Bowl and/or Mono Trees expansions.
- The Arapaho National Forest releases the Draft Environmental Assessment for Winter Park’s proposed Gemini Gondola, Copper Creek South chairlift, Looking Glass replacement, Endeavour replacement and Discovery replacement.
- Park City shutters Sunrise to resume construction of the Sunrise Gondola.
Cataloochee
Cataloochee Announces New Quad Chair

North Carolina’s Cataloochee Ski Area will construct a base-to-summit chairlift this summer, replacing the Omigosh double. Doppelmayr USA will manufacture the lift, which will feature a 740 foot vertical rise and Alpenstar drive terminal. As with the current lift, the new Omigosh will include an intermediate station for internediate level skiers to unload part way up the mountain.

Omigosh is the oldest lift at Cataloochee, constructed by Hall in 1968. Though it has been upgraded over the years, it moves limited skiers to the summit. The new quad will boost capacity and improve the guest experience. Construction is set to begin in May and conclude in advance of the 2025-26 season.
