Though the development group has land to build the project, the 300 acres it owns are entirely surrounded by Rio Grande National Forest. Recent court battles have centered on road access. In his 2017 ruling, Matsch referenced an email between Forest Service staff members that said McCombs exerted political influence to push the move through. However, two weeks later the agency reversed that decision. The previous year, the Forest Service prepared an environmental assessment that decided against the land exchange. The Village at Wolf Creek dates back to 1987 when Leavell Properties Inc., the predecessor to Leavell-McCombs Joint Venture, swapped land with the Forest Service, gaining a 300-acre holding within the bounds of the Rio Grande National Forest. “They left it in a ‘Trust us, we'll do what we need to do’ posture and with the long history of the Wolf Creek village proposal and land exchange, ‘trust us’ was certainly not a reasonable request,” Stills said. But on the other hand, it was a formality that the Forest Service and Leavell-McCombs Joint Venture attempted to circumvent when the case was essentially over,” said Travis Stills, a lawyer for San Juan Citizens Alliance and other environmental groups opposing the project. Multiple failed appeals by Leavell-McCombs Joint Venture and the Forest Service made Kane’s ruling a formality. In response to a motion to reconsider the decision in September 2017, Matsch wrote, “The Forest Service cannot abdicate its responsibility to protect the forest by making an attempt at an artful dodge.” Judge Richard Matsch took issue with the Forest Service’s environmental impact assessment for the project, identifying multiple failures of the agency. Forest Service violated federal law and failed to uphold its responsibilities issuing the land exchange in a May 2017 ruling. The decision comes after a federal judge found the U.S. “Red” McCombs and daughter Marsha McCombs Shields. Kane’s order annulled the land patent that gave 205 acres of National Forest Service land to developers Leavell-McCombs Joint Venture, led by Texas billionaire B.J. “Judge Kane ruled that it had been properly unwound and so that’s a done deal,” Jones said. “As we see it, the joint venture was just dragging their feet on it and the Forest Service was, too, which really calls into question their commitment to following through.”Ĭlint Jones, project lead for the Village at Wolf Creek, said the ruling was a legal reflection that Leavell-McCombs Joint Venture had reversed the exchange. “The question in my mind is: Why did that take so long? And why did we have to go to court to make sure that it was done completely?” he said. “It really just ties up the bow,” said Jimbo Buickerood, the lands and forest protection program manager with the nonprofit San Juan Citizens Alliance. The ruling confirms a major victory for environmental groups in Southwest Colorado that have fought to stop the 1,700-unit development that would have served 8,000 to 10,000 people adjacent to the remote Wolf Creek Ski Area. Kane officially unwound the 2015 land exchange between Rio Grande National Forest and Leavell-McCombs Joint Venture this week, ending one of the paths forward for the development of the “Village at Wolf Creek.” District Court judge has brought to an end a yearslong legal battle between environmental groups and developers for the future of a Wolf Creek Ski Area ski resort.ĭistrict of Colorado Judge John L. (Courtesy of Leavell-McCombs Joint Venture)Ī ruling by a U.S. Developers Leavell-McCombs Joint Venture and environmental groups await an outstanding ruling on an access that could determine the fate of the project. Still, nearly all ski areas across the state have runs closed because of a lack of snow.A rendering of the proposed Village at Wolf Creek. The storms brought each place’s summit depth to over 20 inches. Telluride, Steamboat and Aspen all reported more than 7 inches of new snow on Saturday, according to the National Weather Service. Many mountaineers are hopeful this weekend’s storms are a sign of a change in the weather pattern. Many had 18 inches of snow or less at their base depth on Friday. The few inches of snow most of Colorado saw this weekend was a warm welcome at ski resorts. Jackson Hole reported 129 inches on Monday morning, according to the National Weather Service. It marks the first resort in Colorado and one of the first in the United States to surpass the 100 inch mark. Wolf Creek Ski Area, known for being one of the snowiest spots in the state, is now up to 122 inches for the season. Luckily, Mother Nature answered this weekend by dumping 26 inches in the southwestern part of the state. Snow-starved Colorado has skiers and riders begging for powder. Friday, June 23rd 2023 Home Page Close Menu
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