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Silver Mountain responds to avalanche criticism

JOSH McDONALD | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 6 hours, 28 minutes AGO
by JOSH McDONALD
Staff Writer | March 24, 2026 1:06 AM

KELLOGG — Silver Mountain officials have responded to criticism from a longtime patron following an avalanche incident earlier this month. 

On Friday, March 13, two skiers were caught in an avalanche on the mountain’s Moonshine run, and according to Silver Mountain officials, they "were quickly rescued."

On March 15, Sammy Farnham, a multiyear family season pass holder at Silver Mountain with a reported 40 years of skiing and snowboarding experience, took to social media, where he published a timeline of alleged firsthand accounts compiled from messages between him and others on the mountain. 

In his post, Farnham questioned whether adequate avalanche mitigation had occurred prior to opening, noting the absence of audible explosive work and citing reports of up to five avalanches within about an hour of operations. 

He also raised concerns about gondola safety checks after a tree contacted a tower, alleging that employees were loaded before the full inspections were completed and stranded on the line for hours. 

He further claimed guests were routed through avalanche debris during an emergency shutdown without clear warnings, potentially exposing them to ongoing rescue operations. 

Farnham said Silver Mountain did not initially acknowledge the scope of avalanche activity publicly and expressed concern about transparency, particularly given that General Manager Jeff Colburn also serves as president of Ski Idaho, an organization funded in part through taxpayer‑supported tourism revenues. 

“Professionally, I work as a project manager in the oil and gas industry,” Farnham said. “It is an environment where maintaining a balance between productivity, environmental safety, and the safety of workers is critical. I have worked at companies where the safety culture was inconsistent and have seen how that can lead to serious consequences, even fatalities.” 

Colburn reviewed Farnham’s timeline and concerns and issued a response.

“At 5:30 a.m., a group of 12 patrollers, all qualified to ski cut and use explosives, left the base and drove up the mountain to begin extensive mitigation throughout the day,” Colburn said. 

Colburn said that during a gondola line inspection from the top and bottom, a treetop was discovered on a tower. The gondola was shut down, the treetop was removed, and the tower was thoroughly inspected before operations resumed. 

“Start-up procedures were completed prior to staff being uploaded,” Colburn said. “At approximately 3 p.m., guests started uploading. At approximately 4:30 p.m., ski patrol was notified of an avalanche on a ski run named Moonshine involving skiers. The mountain was immediately shut down.” 

According to Colburn, ski patrol observed a small, skier‑triggered slide on Terrible Edith while responding. Skiers were directed to proceed to the mountain house, and guests midway on Chair 4 were told to use the Home James run, which patrol deemed the safest route. Farnham raised concerns about guest routing and communication during the shutdown. 

On March 14, Silver Mountain adjusted its operating plan after morning evaluations, eventually running only Chair 5 and the magic carpet. 

“Silver Mountain continues to review mountain safety and operational procedures,” Colburn said.

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Silver Mountain responds to avalanche criticism

Skier questions whether adequate mitigation work was done prior to opening

Farnham said Silver Mountain did not initially acknowledge the scope of avalanche activity publicly and expressed concern about transparency, particularly given that General Manager Jeff Colburn also serves as president of Ski Idaho, an organization funded in part through taxpayer‑supported tourism revenues.