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The lack of snow has left many resort employees in a tight fix as there is little available work and rent is still due. Here Chris Birdsall, Mike McCullah, and Aaron James hold down the porch at the Squaw Valley Employee Housing with only rain in sight.
Ski resort employees are not eyeing the weather forecast for only the anticipation of taking to the slopes for the seasons first ski runs.
In the Sierra, winter recreation depends on snow. So, a heavy snowstorm also represents a paycheck to the regions lift operators, ski patrolmen and ski school instructors.
Itd be nice to be working right now, said Warren Hepworth, a 21-year-old university graduate from Melbourne, Australia, who arrived in Tahoe last week to live the life of a Squaw Valley lift operator for the season.
A third of Squaws 600 new hires have yet to receive full-time schedules, said resort spokeswoman Savannah Cowley. But thats typical for the few weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas, when hopes often outstrip early-season snowfall.
Its a notoriously slow season in the ski industry, Cowley said.
For the most part, seasonal employees are well aware that they are not guaranteed hours until the holiday business picks up, said Dave Pierce, Squaws director of lift operations.
Most of them are prepared to just sit back in their two-bedroom condos and just watch football, he said.
Sara York, a 24-year-old from Massachusetts, said shes anticipating working at Squaw kids ski school, as much to fill the time productively than for the paycheck. York said she saved up enough money to carry herself through the slow shoulder season.
I feel so lazy right now, she said.
Hepworth, who also saved enough money to cover travel expenses, four-months rent and initial living costs, said hes passing the time by exploring the area, visiting San Francisco on one of his forays.
Were not doing too much in terms of going out and spending too much, he said.
But restless frustration hangs in the air, especially at Squaws employee hostel, Hepworth said.
Theyre all getting quite frustrated [at the hostel] and running amok, he said.
Several of the hostels current residents said theyre strapped for cash and are picking up some extra dollars by playing music in grocery store parking lots.
All you can do is play music in the streets, said Matthew Nicholls from Yuba City, who is staying at the hostel. Were living on tips from playing drums.
Mike McCullah, another hostel resident, said he picked up a few hours working as a janitor at High Camp.
I was originally hired as a lift [operator], McCullah said while smoking a cigarette on the hostels front porch. But as soon as I got here and realized there was no snow, I got on as a janitor at High Camp.
Squaw Valley is not charging its employees staying at the hostel any lodging fees, Cowley said. The majority of Squaws fresh crop of employees, especially the international hires, are just starting to arrive, said Pierce, who traveled to South America and Australia to recruit students.
Squaw hires just enough lift operators to distribute full-time hours across the board when all of the chairs are running, he said. Until then, the hours are distributed on a part-time basis.
We make them fully aware that we dont control the weather, Pierce said. But all that being said, I feel a huge responsibility. Theyve traveled so far, and I want to make that experience as positive as possible.
<i> The Sierra Suns Seth Lightcap contributed to this article.</i>
In the Sierra, winter recreation depends on snow. So, a heavy snowstorm also represents a paycheck to the regions lift operators, ski patrolmen and ski school instructors.
Itd be nice to be working right now, said Warren Hepworth, a 21-year-old university graduate from Melbourne, Australia, who arrived in Tahoe last week to live the life of a Squaw Valley lift operator for the season.
A third of Squaws 600 new hires have yet to receive full-time schedules, said resort spokeswoman Savannah Cowley. But thats typical for the few weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas, when hopes often outstrip early-season snowfall.
Its a notoriously slow season in the ski industry, Cowley said.
For the most part, seasonal employees are well aware that they are not guaranteed hours until the holiday business picks up, said Dave Pierce, Squaws director of lift operations.
Most of them are prepared to just sit back in their two-bedroom condos and just watch football, he said.
Sara York, a 24-year-old from Massachusetts, said shes anticipating working at Squaw kids ski school, as much to fill the time productively than for the paycheck. York said she saved up enough money to carry herself through the slow shoulder season.
I feel so lazy right now, she said.
Hepworth, who also saved enough money to cover travel expenses, four-months rent and initial living costs, said hes passing the time by exploring the area, visiting San Francisco on one of his forays.
Were not doing too much in terms of going out and spending too much, he said.
But restless frustration hangs in the air, especially at Squaws employee hostel, Hepworth said.
Theyre all getting quite frustrated [at the hostel] and running amok, he said.
Several of the hostels current residents said theyre strapped for cash and are picking up some extra dollars by playing music in grocery store parking lots.
All you can do is play music in the streets, said Matthew Nicholls from Yuba City, who is staying at the hostel. Were living on tips from playing drums.
Mike McCullah, another hostel resident, said he picked up a few hours working as a janitor at High Camp.
I was originally hired as a lift [operator], McCullah said while smoking a cigarette on the hostels front porch. But as soon as I got here and realized there was no snow, I got on as a janitor at High Camp.
Squaw Valley is not charging its employees staying at the hostel any lodging fees, Cowley said. The majority of Squaws fresh crop of employees, especially the international hires, are just starting to arrive, said Pierce, who traveled to South America and Australia to recruit students.
Squaw hires just enough lift operators to distribute full-time hours across the board when all of the chairs are running, he said. Until then, the hours are distributed on a part-time basis.
We make them fully aware that we dont control the weather, Pierce said. But all that being said, I feel a huge responsibility. Theyve traveled so far, and I want to make that experience as positive as possible.
<i> The Sierra Suns Seth Lightcap contributed to this article.</i>
A storm's brewing
A cold Pacific Ocean storm may dump 6 to 12 inches of snow on the Tahoe Basin later this week, according to the National Weather Service in Reno.
The weather pattern indicates the storm will drop down the California coast on Thursday morning and move to southern Arizona by Friday afternoon, passing over the Sierra Nevada along the way, said meteorologist Wendell Hohmann of the National Weather Service office in Reno by phone Tuesday. But weather models predict that the bulk of the storm will hit hardest in Alpine and Mono counties in the central Sierra Nevada, just south of Tahoe, Hohmann said. Now if the track just goes a little bit further north, then Tahoe could also receive a significant amount of snow, he said. It does look like [Tahoe] is going to get some snow, regardless. |


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