Western View
Holding Court at Castle
Skier: Sven Brunso; Photo: HENRY GEORGI
“Last season we had some of the lowest lows
you could possibly imagine,” says Andrew Rusynyk,
Castle’s director of snow sports, marketing and
development. “We had liftees and instructors handshovelling
snow to try to keep the mountain open.”
And yet, and yet... The radical
environmentalists who engineered Haig’s delay
delivered a blessing in disguise. Even the grim
season of rain and skiers’ discontent brought
some good. “We ended the season with stronger
support from local businesses and communities,”
says Rusynyk. Bottom line: Castle and the doughty
local businesspeople who jointly own it have
emerged from their annus horribilis
tougher, tougher, politically smarter and fi nancially sparer—but
with their optimism undimmed.
After one of the warmest, sunniest
Novembers in memory, Castle opened late
and with scratchy conditions for the 2004-
05 season. After gaining a reasonable base
by mid-January, the mountain was hit with
17 cm—of liquid, a rainstorm holding the
equivalent of 170 cm of Rocky Mountains cold
smoke. The rain washed away the snow, forcing
the mountain to close. Castle reopened weeks
later, with limited skiing that included having
to negotiate the fabled South Chutes in guided
groups. There was great powder on top, but
the lower zones were stump and rock fi elds
requiring tortuous navigation on tiny ribbons
of crust and ice. The mountain shut down
again in March. “We had no skiable exits, and
with only 10 per cent downloading capacity
on the chairlift, we had no safe way of getting
people off the mountain,” says Rusynyk.
Castle’s numbers plunged to just 15,000
skier-visits for the season (a busy day
at at Whistler-Blackcomb can top 25,000). Even this,
however, contained a Nietzschean element.
Says Rusynyk: “Everyone got a taste of what
their lives would be like if we weren’t around.
There were gas stations and motels down
50 per cent or more, and many stores were
signifi cantly slower. The low numbers proved
our economic importance to the local region.”
The Haig delay also proved fortuitous.
As described in a previous issue (see Ski
Canada, November 2004), a 335-verticalmetre,
28-hectare development on the lower
ridge of the mountain adjoining the main ski
hill would provide more than a dozen new
groomed runs in sheltered terrain, all below
treeline and at the lower angles congenial
to intermediates and novices. Haig would
complement Castle’s famously fearsome main
mountain, enabling the resort to nurture the
stable base of family skiers it will require
for the long term. The development would
lift Castle’s annual skier-count from about
65,000 to an estimated 150,000, elevating
it from ski industry sideshow to boutique
resort. Opening Haig under last season’s
conditions, however, would have been an
even bigger disaster than the court-induced
delay. With no revenue to show for its $2-
million investment, Castle would have been
hard-pressed to survive.
Instead, it’s now ready to forge ahead.
In summer 2004, the grandiosely named
Castle-Crown Wilderness Coalition (I guess
that sounds better than “Three Curmudgeons
in a Cabin”) persuaded the Alberta Court of
Queen’s Bench to halt Haig. The plaintiff’s
argument—I simplify somewhat—was that
provincial environment offi cials had no legal
right to permit the development without a
full environmental impact assessment (EIA).
The bureaucrats had decided that, because
a previous proposal for a much larger resort
scheme had gone through this arduous,
costly process, the smaller Haig proposal
didn’t require a second EIA. The court,
however, agreed with the Coalition, ordering
the government at minimum to revisit its
internal process and rewrite its decision, if
not order another EIA.
In May 2005, the provincial government
and Castle appealed the ruling. Although a
ruling had not been handed down by late
July, Brian Cusack, Castle’s general manager,
says the hearing before a three-justice panel
seemed to go very well for the resort. The
government’s lawyers argued that provincial
legislation affords the environment minister
and senior offi cials broad discretion to make
decisions on questions of policy. Further,
the Haig proposal falls below EIA-triggering
thresholds specifi cally set out in provincial
law. A key one is a projected 250,000 skiervisits
at build-out, far larger than Castle
would become.
Castle’s lawyer argued that the trial
judge failed to take into consideration the
numerous other provincial and local agencies
and mechanisms already in place to monitor,
limit and mitigate environmental impacts.
In other words, an EIA isn’t the only way
to protect the environment. This seemed to
resonate with the court, says Cusack, with the
justices pointedly asking the Coalition’s lawyer
whether this was not the case.
Although appeals normally concern
themselves with lower-court errors of fact or
law, the Coalition also tried to introduce new
evidence. It argued that Castle’s “fi re smart”
program to protect the village from forest fi res
was a pre-development logging program in
disguise. It also questioned the resort’s projected
visitations, arguing that Haig’s impacts would be
far higher than claimed. “Basically, the court tore
apart the Coalition’s case,” says Cusack. “We feel
confident we won the appeal.”
The Alberta Court of Appeal had not ruled
at the time I wrote this. Castle was fervently
hoping for a decision before the court broke
for summer vacation on July 1. Further delay
would push back construction by another year.
Meanwhile, resort managers also met with halfa-
dozen provincial cabinet ministers, arguing
the importance of Castle to the regional
economy and urging the government to make
plans to meet the court’s demands if the
appeal went against them.
Either way, Castle is ready to go. In June
Derrill Murphy, one of Castle’s key fi nancial
backers and a man of strong personal initiative,
purchased a well-maintained Doppelmayr triple
chairlift from Beaver Creek, Colorado. (Murphy
also built the 110-bed Castle Mountain Ski
Lodge and Hostel two seasons back.) The resort
had previously envisioned installing a new,
fi xed-grip quad, but last season’s poor results
make that out of the question. Instead, thanks
to the loose change jingling in the cheroottwirling
Murphy’s pockets, going the used-lift
route will halve the $1.6-million project’s cost.
As of July, Castle had a disassembled lift
sitting at its base, ready to go. Says Cusack:
“We think we can do the engineering work and
cut the runs in six weeks, after which we would
install the lift ourselves, in time for this ski
season.” All the resort needed was the court’s
go-ahead. At worst, says Rusynyk, Castle’s
customers and supporters will just have to wait
one more year. Regardless, Castle tends to have
an epic season about every third year. By my
count, this will be one.
This column appeared in the Fall 2005 issue.