NEWS

Jay Peak's tram can't run before $4.5M upgrades

Jess Aloe
Free Press Staff Writer
The tram at Jay Peak Resort makes its way up the mountain for summer tourists on Wednesday August 5, 2009.

Jay Peak's iconic aerial trams need $4.5 million worth of work -- including overhauling the arms that attach the cabins to the cables above --  before the state will allow the system to operate this summer.

The repairs are a large expense amidst uncertainty about the resort's future after the Securities and Exchange Commission and the state filed charges accusing owner Ariel Quiros and chief executive officer Bill Stenger of massive fraud. The SEC said Quiros and Stenger misused $200 million from the EB-5 program, which allows foreign nationals to gain U.S. residency if they invest $500,000 in projects that create jobs in economically depressed areas.

On Thursday, Michael Goldberg, the federal receiver appointed to oversee Jay Peak in the wake of the SEC accusations, said he was planning to file a motion in federal court by Monday to gain approval for the expense.

"It kind of sucks that has to happen now," Goldberg said Thursday, shortly after flying back from Burlington, where he was meeting with Jay Peak subcontractors to discuss money owed to them by the resort.

Jay Peak Resort president Bill Stenger looks out over the Northeast Kingdom as he rides down from Jay Peak on the resort's aerial tram on Monday, November 19, 2012.

Records obtained by the Burlington Free Press show the state's concerns over the condition of the tram began as early as last year, when the state Passenger Tramway Board brought in Doppelmayr, an international company that manufactures ski lifts, to provide an engineering assessment.

Last June, Doppelmayr's president, Mark Bee, wrote a letter to Stenger, saying the tram had been carrying too much weight at once since 1966, due to a mistake in the original operating manual.

Bee recommended Jay Peak reduce capacity on the tram, which the resort did.

"Of greater concern to us is the condition of the carriages," Bee wrote in his letter. "To our knowledge there are no records to indicate that the carriages have been subject to regular and thorough [non-destructive testing] inspections."

The Jay Peak tram shown in 2004.

The carriages connect the cabins to the cables running up and down the mountain. Bee's letter recommended Jay Peak perform a thorough inspection of the carriages before allowing the tram to carry passengers.

Stephen Monahan, who oversees the tramway board, said he wasn't sure if the absence of records indicated a lack of testing or a lack of documentation. He said he began insisting on more formal record-keeping when he took over the ski lift safety board about two years ago.

Monahan added that discussions about upgrading the tram began before he took over, but wasn't sure exactly when his organization began expressing concerns to the resort.

J.J. Toland, the director of communications for Jay Peak, said the resort has done every test the state asked of the ski area.

In most cases, the thorough inspections recommended by Bee involve complete disassembly of the carriages, but Doppelmayr offered interim solutions that, combined with daily inspections, allowed the tram to run for the 2015-2016 season.

Monahan emphasized he would not allow the tram to run if his inspectors had safety concerns, and if Jay Peak did not begin the $4.5 million in carriage overhauls, as well as electronic upgrades, he would not allow the lifts to run for the summer season.

Jay Peak's tram shown here in 2015.

Toland said the resort flew in a Swiss technician to conduct non-destructive testing last year and found no corrosion or anomalies.

Shortly after receiving Bee's letter, Stenger wrote to Monahan assuring the state that Jay Peak was planning an electrical system upgrade and a carriage overhaul for the 2016-2017 ski season.

Before Jay Peak was able to finalize plans to do the needed work, the SEC filed its fraud complaint, freezing the resort's assets and placing control in the hands of a Miami federal court.

Michael Goldberg, a court-appointed lawyer in charge of all operations at both Jay Peak and Q Burke, speaks with the Free Press  before a news conference at Hotel Jay.

The resort is just beginning normal spring maintenance now, Toland said, which should be complete by June 15. Once the work is done, the state will conduct an inspection after which, Toland said, the resort will begin running the tram as a scenic ride.

The electronic upgrades and carriage overhauls will take place over the next 12 months, he said.

"The tram is definitely an icon of Jay Peak and maintaining it and maintaining its ride safety is of paramount importance to us and the state of Vermont and the tramway board," Toland said. "The Passenger Tramway Board is a pretty rigorous organization -- because you’re putting people in the sky.”

Contact Jess Aloe at  jaloe@freepressmedia.com or 802-660-1874. Follow her on Twitter at www.twitter.com/JessAloe