The U.S. Forest Service has dismissed objections raised over the Village at Wolf Creek and intends to give road access to the developer of the proposed project atop Wolf Creek Pass.
In July, the Forest Service announced it would grant Leavell-McCombs Joint Venture its long-desired road access to U.S. Highway 160, essentially paving the way for the resort, expected to be the size of Aspen.
Tamara Whittington, deputy regional forester for the Forest Service’s Rocky Mountain Region, responded Monday to objections raised about the project. Acting as the reviewing officer of the objections, Whittington said the concerns raised were not valid.
She wrote that the Forest Service acted in accordance with federal law and regulations in issuing the developer road access.
“I find that the analysis in the project record supports the rationale contained in the draft (Record of Decision),” Whittington wrote. “Objectors’ suggested remedies are denied.”
Whittington did attach two conditions that must be met before the Village at Wolf Creek can move forward.
First, the Forest Service cannot issue a final Record of Decision until a “Biological Opinion” is received from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service about the Village at Wolf Creek’s potential impact to the threatened lynx.
Second, the Forest Service is not allowed to implement the new decision until the 2015 Record of Decision, which calls for a land swap, is undone.
Calls to a coalition of environmental groups opposed to the Village at Wolf Creek were not immediately returned Tuesday.
Driven by Texas billionaire B.J. “Red” McCombs, efforts to build a resort at the top of Wolf Creek Pass have been ongoing for more than 30 years. The property, however, has always lacked road access to U.S. Highway 160.
The resort would be located about 20 miles from the nearest towns – Pagosa Springs and South Fork – at an elevation of about 10,000 feet, adjacent to the relatively small Wolf Creek Ski Area.
About four years ago, the Forest Service approved a land swap that gave the developer road access, but it was immediately challenged by environmental groups.
These groups alleged the Forest Service failed to take environmental concerns into account and the agency was unduly influenced by McCombs’ political pressure to grant road access.
A federal court judge in May 2017 agreed, calling the Forest Service’s decision biased, and the environmental review that justified the land swap an “artful dodge” of its responsibilities to protect public lands.
The July decision to grant the developer access through the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act, or ANILCA, came as a shock to environmental groups. The act promises owners of in-holdings access to their land.
In her response to objectors, Whittington said the concerns raised have been properly analyzed and the agency’s actions were in accordance with federal law.
One of the major points of contention – that the Forest Service did not follow the National Environmental Protection Act in evaluating the village – was addressed.
Whittington said the Forest Service is tasked with weighing the impacts of the proposed access road, and the overall impact of the project would have to be taken into account at the local level once construction plans are in place.
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