Skiers make their way down Snowmass Resort on a cloudy day on Monday, March 8, 2021. (Kelsey Brunner/The Aspen Times)
Aspen Skiing Co. hasn’t determined yet what its season pass lineup will look like next season but the once-popular Classic Pass has bitten the dust.
Skico will announce the bulk of passes and prices in August, as it has usually done. The tradition was disrupted last year because of the pandemic. Skico officials worked on pass options and pricing right up until they announced the results in late September.
“We are reviewing all the new pass options and what we offered in the past” to decide what to offer next season, Skico vice president of communications Jeff Hanle said Tuesday.
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Basalt council decides to play it safe by extending face covering requirement
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Aspen Skiing Co eliminates Classic Pass, lineup will be announced in August
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A local nonprofit that for almost 30 years has worked to reduce energy consumption and is now zeroing in on a carbon-free, net-zero future for the Roaring Fork Valley received initial support from Aspen’s elected officials Monday to receive $1.2 million next year.
As a check-in with Aspen City Council to gauge how it feels about releasing money from a fund that generates revenue through mitigation fees for energy-sucking developments, Mona Newton, executive director for the Community Office for Resource Efficiency, gave officials an update on what the organization has accomplished and where it’s going in the future.
This year has served as a transition year for CORE, as its main funding source, the Renewable Energy Mitigation Program, is beginning to dry up as new construction is bound by stricter building codes that require energy efficiency measures.