Judge sentences Jeffco man to life, plus 60 years for killing Alexa Bartell in rock-throwing spree

Copper Mountain Tucker MountainCopper Mountain Tucker Mountain
Copper Mountain is the subject of a recently filed class-action lawsuit. | Photo: Liam Abbott

If you’ve bought food at a ski resort recently and thought, “This should be illegal,” you’re not alone. A class action lawsuit has been filed against Copper Mountain, Colorado, and the resort operator, POWDR, by Gary Chaney and other Copper Mountain visitors for allegedly engaging in deceptive pricing practices. The lawsuit claims that not including the resort surcharge of 9% in menu prices is in violation of the Colorado Consumer Protection Act. At the time of Chaney’s visit, menu prices as advertised are misleading as visitors think food is cheaper than it is until checkout.

In the USA, prices on food and retail items typically do not include tax, and receipts typically only list government levied taxes like sales tax. The lawsuit points out that Copper Mountain and POWDR are not collecting a government-mandated tax but are incurring an additional revenue and should as such beincluded in the menu-listed prices. The lawsuit illustrates its point with a hypothetical: POWDR could list a burger at $5—the cost of ingredients—then add a “cooking surcharge” and a resort surcharge at checkout. POWDR Vice President for Communications Stacey Hutchinson told Summit Daily that the lawsuit is “entirely baseless.”

The Colorado Consumer Protection Act, signed into law in May 2019, forbids unfair or deceptive trade practices, which include “knowingly or recklessly engaging in any unfair, unconscionable, deceptive, deliberately misleading, false, or fraudulent act or practice.” However, proving in court that POWDR and Copper Mountain intentionally mislead their customers may prove challenging. On the one hand, not including resort charges in food menu prices seems misleading, but on the other hand, POWDR could have further hidden this resort charges along with the sales tax in a general ‘Taxes and Fees.’

As of now, the lawsuit has not been scheduled for trial.

On mountain food can be pricey at the bes tof times. | Photo: SnowBrains


<!– SnowBrains Facebook PageSnowBrains Facebook Page
–>

  • Related Posts

    The Town Talk Subscription Offers, Specials, and Discounts

    June 12, 2025, 9:40 PM EDT/UpdatedJune 12, 2025, 11:53 PM EDT By Jordan Rubin UPDATE (June 12, 2025 11:48 p.m. E.T.): Late on Thursday night, a panel of the U.S.…

    Unexamined hair strand at center of 35-year-old NE OKC murder case; hearing held in Oklahoma County

    NEW YORK, June 12, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Gross Law Firm issues the following notice to shareholders of Rocket Companies, Inc. (NYSE: RKT). Shareholders who purchased shares of RKT…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *