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Jumbo Glacier, British Columbia

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Country
  
Canada

Incorporated
  
February 19, 2013

Website
  
Jumbo Glacier Resort

Province
  
Region
  
Waterways
  
Jumbo Creek

Elevation
  
1,700 m

Jumbo Glacier, British Columbia httpsusatunofficialfileswordpresscom201606

Time zone
  
Mountain Standard (MST) (UTC-7)

Flight over panorama jumbo glacier british columbia


Jumbo Glacier, also known as Jumbo, is a mountain resort municipality within the Regional District of East Kootenay in southeast British Columbia, Canada. It is approximately 55 km (34 mi) west of Invermere near the Commander Glacier and around the headwaters of Jumbo Creek in the Purcell Range of the Columbia Mountains.

Contents

Jumbo Glacier, British Columbia Controversial Jumbo Glacier resort 39not substantially started39 in

Jumbo Glacier is planned to be a year-round skiing mountain resort developed in three phases at an estimated cost of $450 million. The future resort development has been the subject of controversy as a result of public opposition from the residents of the region, the Lower Kootenay First Nation and the Sinixt Nation for political, economic, and environmental reasons. It is the subject of the documentary, Jumbo Wild, by Patagonia and Sweetgrass Productions.

Jumbo Glacier, British Columbia Jumbo Glacier Resort Official Site

Flight over panorama jumbo glacier british columbia


HistoryEdit

Jumbo Glacier, British Columbia Supreme Court to hear Ktunaxa Nation opposition to Jumbo ski resort

Jumbo Mountain and its glacier were named after a mining claim established on nearby Toby Creek in 1890. The stakeholders hoped it would be a large, productive mine, and named it after Jumbo, P. T. Barnum's popular performing elephant. Although the mine was productive for several years, it did not last into the 20th century.

Jumbo Glacier, British Columbia About the Project Jumbo Glacier Resort

The idea of developing a recreational resort in the Jumbo Valley was first presented to the British Columbia government in 1990 by a consortium of investors called Glacier Resorts Ltd. In 1993, the proposal was approved for further consultation and review, including preparation of environmental impact assessments. These were not completed until 2004. The same year, representatives from the Ktunaxa Nation went public with concerns about the proposal, specifically about its impact on grizzly bears and other wildlife. Opposition to the project grew, resulting in a 2010 protest in Victoria, the provincial capital. The proposal process continued, and over the next two years final approvals were granted. A letters patent to incorporate Jumbo Glacier as a municipality was approved by order in council on November 19, 2012. Its formal date of incorporation was February 19, 2013.

GovernmentEdit

The Government of British Columbia appointed Jumbo Glacier's first municipal council for a term beginning February 19, 2013, its official incorporation date, and ending November 30, 2014, at which point local governance will align with the province's general municipal election cycle. Despite not yet having any residents, the first municipal council consists of a mayor, Greg Deck of Radium Hot Springs, and two councillors, Nancy Hugunin of Fairmont Hot Springs and Steve Ostrander of Invermere. Phil Taylor of Golden was appointed the municipality's interim chief officer to serve in advance of the official incorporation date until the first municipal council meeting.

Proposed developmentEdit

Jumbo Glacier, British Columbia BC approves Jumbo Glacier Mountain ski resort British Columbia

The approved resort proposal would have involved over $450 million in new construction and a major new road into the remote area. Pheidias Project Management Corporation of Vancouver is heading the development plans. The new resort was planned to include 1,360 residential units, two hotels, 23 lifts and gondolas, and a village centre with retail stores and amenities. Construction was planned to be completed by 2015, but the environmental assessment certificate expired before construction had begun. It remains to be seen how the project will develop.

References

Jumbo Glacier, British Columbia Wikipedia


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