After nearly two weeks on strike, Park City ski patrollers are finally going back to work after an agreement was reached and ratified to end the work stoppage that caused havoc for skiers.
Two hundred Utah ski patrollers have ended a nearly two-week strike and returned to work at the biggest ski resort in the U.S.
The ski patrol strike at the Park City resort in Utah ended Thursday after the mountain's owners agreed to a wage hike of $2 ...
The latest: An Illinois skier who visited Park City during the holiday filed a class-action federal lawsuit Thursday on ...
Utah troopers said they don't know say why Sevier County Sheriffs were pursuing the semi or what caused the fire.
The new contract ensures the Utah ski patrollers wage parity, or that their pay will rise with any increase in other Vail Resorts' ski patrol wages, the union s ...
Skiers have filed a class action lawsuit against Vail Resorts, saying they spent thousands of dollars to visit Park City ...
The Park City Professional Ski Patrol Association announced they will return to work Thursday following a 100% ratification ...
About 200 ski patrollers at Park City Mountain Resort went on strike for almost two weeks during the busy holiday season.
Park City Mountain and the Park City Professional Ski Patrol Association have reached a tentative agreement to end the ...
Park City Mountain reached an agreement with its ski patrollers this week, ending a strike that threw the popular Utah resort ...
Park City Mountain's ski patrollers approved a new contract with Vail Resorts, ending a 13-day strike. Ski patrol and ...