An Epic Pass is pictured Nov. 17 with Vail Mountain in the background. In April 2020, Vail Resorts announced Epic Coverage, which was meant to refund passholders if resorts closed due to COVID-19 or customers had certain personal events that prevented skiing. Some passholders say they have not been issued refunds.
Photo by John LaConte / Vail Daily
As the ski season comes to a close, some Epic Pass holders are complaining that they still haven’t received refunds that they’re due.
Last spring, Vail Resorts announced that it would provide free Epic Coverage on its 2020-21 passes, providing “cash refunds to passholders for certain resort closures, including for events like COVID-19, as well as refunds for eligible personal events like job loss, illness and more.”
Most Colorado counties left ski area capacities up to the resorts vaildaily.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vaildaily.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
This past weekend’s storm came through Summit County later than expected, but snow was falling steadily Saturday afternoon and throughout Sunday. According to National Weather Service Meteorologist Zach Hiris, a report from Dillon showed accumulation.
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