resort development

Grand Targhee Wins Expansion Approval


By Chris Hansen, 2-15-08

 
 

On Monday, February 4, Grand Targhee Resort owners received long-awaited approval for expansion. After more than three years of planning and public input, the Teton County, Wyoming, board of commissioners voted 4-1 in favor to allow the resort to expand in an area at 8,000 feet on the west side of the Teton Range, just above Alta, Wyoming.

The dissenting commissioner, Leland Christiansen, is from Alta, and according to an article in the February 5 issue of the Jackson Hole Daily, “tried in earnest to persuade the board to vote down the expansion proposal.” He was not alone in his pleas; for weeks local papers have included many impassioned letters about the folly of allowing such a large expansion within the delicate forest ecosystem in which Targhee sits without adequate mitigation measures. The final planning meeting included nearly three hours of public comment, nearly all of which was against the proposal.

But in the end, a majority of commissioners was not swayed and approved the expansion proposal with 36 conditions. Perhaps most significant in the proposal is that approval allows Grand Targhee an upzoning on 120 acres from rural to resort and expansion to 450 development units.

The Grand Targhee expansion plan began with a hotly contested land swap several years ago that exchanged a privately held in-holding near Yellowstone National Park for forest service land at the base of the resort. After successful completion of the land swap, the Gillette family, owners of Grand Targhee Resort, began plans for expansion of the ski area. On tap is a complete re-build of the base area including 150,000 square feet of commercial space, 45 single family units, 45 cabins or townhomes and the remaining 360 units comprised of condo, condo-hotel, and employee units within the 30-acre resort area. With conditions of the expansion approved, Targhee will move ahead with the development of a land-use plan, which according to a release from Grand Targhee could take as many as six months to complete.

In addition to issues of environmental sensitivity, it helps to understand the social and community implications of Grand Targhee’s geo-political situation. Grand Targhee sits completely surrounded by national forest land at 8,000 feet on the west side of the Tetons in the very western portion of Wyoming. However, it is accessed from the Idaho side of the range, through Driggs, and is, for all practical purposes, an extension of the eastern Idaho valley known as Teton Valley, home to Victor and Driggs. But its physical location in Teton County, Wyoming, requires an approval process through and jurisdiction by Teton County, Wyoming, government. (Some have opined that while the approved plan is far from perfect, it was likely vetted through a more stringent approval process than it would have come up against had the plan been put in front of the Teton County, Idaho, planning department.) The road to Grand Targhee runs through the small town of Alta, Wyoming, just over the Idaho/Wyoming state line, and the increased development of Grand Targhee threatens to have perhaps the greatest impact on this small community.

Some of the conditions Targhee owners have agreed to include:

  • Preservation of 299 acres of open space to help mitigate development impacts
  • Payment of (some say modest) fees to Teton County, Wyoming, to help mitigate the impact on the community of Alta.
  • Providing a portion of employee housing on site with the remainder in Teton County, Idaho.
  • Providing transportation for their own employees from Driggs.
  • Require employee carpooling and transportation for construction workers during development.

For more details on Teton County’s conditions of approval of the Grand Targhee Resort Expansion, visit the Teton County, Wyoming, website at www.tetonwyo.org and download the PDF document.

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Comments

What, no wagonloads of gold bullion to be delivered to the Teton County P-Z Commission and the rest of the rich green weenies in Jackson? 30 acres, that's it? Sounds like a rather smart growth compact thing to me. Gee, I hope the Tetons don't fall down. And those poor Alta folks who'll get rich selling everything you can think of to construction workers and tourists.
The public and wildlife is much better off now with the land swap for Squirrel Meadows. In fact, land in the Yellowstone/Teton region has become so valuable in resent years that the Gillett’s may have been better off to have developed Squirrel Meadows rather than the base of Targhee. Squirrel Meadows is within a couple of miles of Yellowstone Park and is prime habitat for most of the large in interesting species of the area. They are a set of meadows, as the name implies, and they are large meadows that offer beautiful views of the Tetons. The public and wildlife are much better off with Squirrel Meadows having become public land. It was also a larger chunk of land than what the Gillett’s got at the base of Targhee. The base of Targhee is not particularly valuable habitat and does not have great views. The valuable thing about the base of Targhee is that it is slope-side land. The commisioners should have let them build the 925 units as originally proposed. The 500 slope-side units the commissioners cut will only be built somewhere else at some other resort or at some new resort in virgin forest. The only thing the commissioners accomplished was to force this mountain development to be less dense and force the destruction of what might be more valuable habitat elsewhere. The number of hikers and bikers in the summer can be limited by simple laws and with the requirement for permits if it is deemed necessary. Fewer living units at the base of Targhee will not stop people from hiking and biking at Targhee. There are going to be thousands of units in the surrounding area. The town of Driggs is only a few miles away.

I thought some of the commissioners sounded like stark raving lunitics with their antidevelopment rhetoric. Whatever. It is what it is.
Neal, Some? Try to have a reasonable conversation with any or all of the lunatic commissioners or planners! Truly scary that these under-the-table recipients retain their prestigious positions of absolute rule.
Oh cry me a river. Who doesn't want more nar to shred. all their doing is putting some buildings in and more lifts, as far as im concerned Targhee wants people to spend $299 for a cat trip where the new lift will be. More pow pow yeah dude.

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