Mount Snow
After a slow winter due to unseasonably warm weather, signs at the entrance of Mount Snow in Dover advertise passes for next season and the start of summer events. Photo by Mike Faher/VTDigger
[D]OVER โ€“ Mount Snow can’t access $52 million that has already been raised from foreign investors because of an ongoing federal review of Vermont’s EB-5 Regional Center, a resort executive said Thursday.

Timothy Boyd, president and chief executive officer of Mount Snow parent company Peak Resorts, said U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services’ questions about the state’s EB-5 center don’t directly involve the Dover resort, its EB-5 projects or associated funding from foreign investors.

However, Boyd insisted Mount Snow’s EB-5 approvals have been delayed because of their association with the scrutiny of the program. He predicted a positive outcome of the USCIS review, both for Mount Snow and for Vermont.

โ€œWe expect USCIS to complete its inquiry shortly, and that once completed, the status of the regional center will remain unchanged and the adjudication of investor petitions will proceed,โ€ Boyd said during a Peak Resorts quarterly earnings announcement.

Patricia Moulton, secretary of the Agency of Commerce and Community Development which oversees the state regional center, said she doesn’t believe the federal review is holding up Mount Snow’s EB-5 projects.

โ€œWe received a request for information from USCIS, and we have responded within the required time,โ€ Moulton said. โ€œWe have no evidence to suggest any threat to our Regional Center status. We have received no notification from USCIS suggesting any threat to our Regional Center status.โ€

Moulton, who is leaving the agency this week to become president of Vermont Technical College, agreed with Boyd’s optimism about the fate of the state’s EB-5 Regional Center. She disclosed the federal inquiry โ€œwas all Jay Peak-related as well as seeking information about our EB-5 marketing activities.โ€

The federal EB-5 program allows foreigners to gain U.S. visas and permanent residency by investing in job-creating projects in the United States. The program is under scrutiny in Vermont after federal and state investigators earlier this year said they’d uncovered a massive fraud involving $200 million in EB-5 funds at Jay Peak Resort.

Moulton last month acknowledged that USCIS has requested information about the state-run EB-5 Regional Center. The center oversees and markets EB-5 projects in Vermont.

USCIS does not comment on specific EB-5 projects, and a spokesperson has said only that the agency is โ€œcommitted to ensuring the integrity of the EB-5 program.โ€ State officials have not released documents related to the federal inquiry, citing a โ€œlitigation holdโ€ on communications regarding Jay Peak.

In July, the EB-5 Regional Center’s director, Eugene Fullam, resigned. Fullam’s predecessor, Brent Raymond, works at Mount Snow, helping the resort navigate the EB-5 program.

Pat Moulton
Secretary of the Agency of Commerce and Community Development Pat Moulton. Photo by Erin Mansfield/VTDigger

As the drama involving Jay Peak has continued to unfold, Mount Snow administrators have been waiting for federal approval to access $52 million in foreign investment raised via an EB-5 offering.

Federal officials approved Mount Snow’s EB-5 program in May, but final visa-application reviews are still pending.

The EB-5 money will be used to dramatically increase the Dover resort’s snow-making capacity and to construct a new lodge. Those projects have been slowed significantly, and administrators have acknowledged that the West Lake snow-making upgrade won’t be ready for the upcoming ski season.

Mount Snow’s long EB-5 wait โ€“ along with a poor ski season due to last winter’s warm temperatures โ€“ has created financial problems. Last month, parent company Peak Resorts announced that those two factors were the impetus for a $20 million stock sale to raise more working capital.

โ€œThe situation with approval of the EB-5 petition has constrained cash. We’ve funded more than $13 million for EB-5 related projects over the last year as we continue to wait for the first investor’s (visa) petition to be approved by the USCIS,โ€ said Christopher Bub, Peak’s vice president and chief accounting officer.

On Thursday, as Peak announced earnings for the first quarter of its fiscal year, administrators disclosed several rounds of borrowing totaling $8.5 million to strengthen the company’s financial position.

Overall, Peak posted a net loss of $7.9 million for the quarter ending July 31, though administrators noted that losses are typical in the offseason.

โ€œThese short-term borrowings are expected to provide us with the liquidity necessary to manage through our slower season until the start of the 2016-2017 ski season,โ€ Bub said.

During the same earnings-announcement webcast, Boyd spent much of his time talking about Mount Snow’s EB-5 issues. While Peak has in the past blamed the holdup on a backlog of visa applications at USCIS, Boyd on Thursday pointed directly to the federal agency’s review of Vermont’s EB-5 Regional Center.

โ€œThe Vermont Regional Center received an informational request from USCIS concerning the EB-5 program in Vermont. We believe this review is the basis for the delay with our EB-5 investor petitions,โ€ Boyd said.

Boyd took care to separate Mount Snow from the state’s EB-5 troubles, reminding investors that the resort’s plans already have the federal government’s approval.

โ€œWe are not part of the inquiry, but we are part of the Vermont Regional Center, and we believe that’s why our petitions are being held right now,โ€ Boyd said. โ€œIt is also our understanding that this (federal) review should be completed hopefully by the end of this month.โ€

Pressed further on the matter, Boyd did not disclose how he knew any specifics about the federal inquiry. โ€œObviously, we’re not privy to the details of what the USCIS is asking of the Vermont regional center,โ€ he said.

โ€œClearly, it’s public knowledge there’s been a lot of trouble at Jay Peak. Intuitively, you would think that there are some issues there,โ€ Boyd added. โ€œHowever, it is our understanding that this is primarily just a review of the economic activity that the Vermont regional center is generating for the state of Vermont, and that’s what this inquiry is about.โ€

Moulton disagreed with Boyd’s characterization of the Mount Snow delay, saying state officials โ€œhave no evidence that processing of any Vermont Regional Center petitions are being held up by the (federal inquiry) or for any other reason.โ€

โ€œIn fact, we know they have been processing petitions related to projects (that are) part of the Vermont Regional Center,โ€ Moulton said.

Aside from citing a visa backlog at USCIS โ€“ a backlog that the federal government has acknowledged โ€“ Moulton could offer no alternative theories for the Mount Snow EB-5 delay. She said state officials are โ€œmystifiedโ€ by the problem.

โ€œWe recognize the challenges this has created for Mount Snow and other projects waiting for approvals of petitions,โ€ Moulton said.

Twitter: @MikeFaher. Mike Faher reports on health care and Vermont Yankee for VTDigger. Faher has worked as a daily newspaper journalist for 19 years, most recently as lead reporter at the Brattleboro...

4 replies on “Mount Snow blames project delay on federal EB-5 scrutiny”