Colorado Veteran Files Complaint Against Winter Park Resort for not Allowing Her Service Dog to Ride Chairlift

Steven Agar | | Post Tag for Industry NewsIndustry News
veteran, dog, winter park, colorado, chairlift,
Guinness riding the chairlift at nearby Granby resort. Credit: skyhinews

A U.S. Army veteran from Colorado wants a ski area to grant her and her service dog access to ski lifts so they can join friends for dinner at the restaurant on top of the mountain, but that currently is forbidden, writes the SkyHiNews.com.

veteran, dog, winter park, colorado, chairlift,
Sunspot restaurant at Winter Park Resort. Credit: skiworld

Veteran CarrieAnn Grayson, a former U.S. Army captain who spent eight years in the military including participating in the Iraq Invasion in 2003, filed a formal complaint this fall alleging that the resort would not allow her to take her service dog, Guinness, up the chairlifts at the resort and that the accommodation offered to her was not a reasonable accommodation.

“I initially contacted Winter Park in June,” Grayson said, “asking if I could take my service dog on the chairlift. They said they don’t allow dogs. I volunteered to come to Winter Park to talk about different options, to talk about how it can work, to talk about different accommodations.”

veteran, dog, winter park, colorado, chairlift,
Winter Park Resort offered to take Grayson up the mountain in a vehicle. Credit: coloradoski

After a lengthy back-and-forth with other offers, Winter Park Resort eventually offered to take Grayson and Guinness up the mountain in a vehicle but required Grayson to provide advanced notice. According to Grayson, the resort requested at least five days notice. For Grayson, the advance notice requirement, her separation from the general public while traveling up the mountain and her inability to ride the chairlift with Guinness were all unreasonable accommodations.

While the law does not specifically outline what qualifies as a “reasonable accommodation” for all circumstances, the law states reasonable accommodations must be made unless doing so would pose an undue hardship by creating significant difficulty or expense.

veteran, dog, winter park, colorado, chairlift,
Sunspot restaurant at the top of the Zephyr chairlift, Winter Park Resort. Credit: kdvr

Officials from the resort confirmed this week that they were aware of Grayson’s request, that they do not allow service dogs to ride up chairlifts out of a sense of caution, and went on to say Winter Park Resort’s policy is consistent with other ski resorts in the country, especially at those located on land managed by the U.S. Forest Service. Steamboat Springs Resort, all the ski resorts around Aspen and all of Vail’s resort properties employ similar policies for service dogs riding chairlifts.

Winter Park Resort put the entire incident in the context of safety.

 


Related Articles

2 thoughts on “Colorado Veteran Files Complaint Against Winter Park Resort for not Allowing Her Service Dog to Ride Chairlift

  1. Spare me, dogs do not belong on a chairlift unless they are avalanche rescue dogs and dogs most certainly don’t belong in restaurants either. These people with their “service” dogs are going way too far.

Got an opinion? Let us know...