Wendy Knight, commissioner of the Vermont Department of Tourism and Marketing, at a press conference on the department’s tourism report on Thursday at Sugarbush ski resort in Warren. Photo by Mark Johnson/VTDigger

WARREN — Itโ€™s the season for superlatives at Vermont ski areas, thanks to early snowfall and below-average temperatures.

Several Vermont ski areas had their earliest opening days in history this autumn, including Magic Mountain, Mad River Valley, and Mount Snow. Smugglers Notch had the most terrain available on an opening day in its history. The ski areas are making the most of the cold by making snow now so there will be a base when theyโ€™re flooded with visitors over Christmas week.

โ€œThey lay down their base now, and a weather event like tomorrowโ€™s (rain and thaw) isnโ€™t going to affect them that much because they have built such a thick base and can regroom the top,โ€ said Adam White, the director of communications for the Vermont Ski Areas Association, on Monday. โ€œMount Snow just finished the longest snowmaking period in its history because of early season cold weather. Now they have a much thicker snowpack.”

Smith was at Sugarbush ski resort Thursday for Vermont Gov. Phil Scottโ€™s weekly press conference, an event that was dedicated to the release of the latest tourism data for the state and a shout-out for the industry.

After manufacturing, tourism contributes the most money to Vermontโ€™s economy, Scott said. The industry generates more than $1 billion in wages and $391 million in taxes per year, he said. And the Scott administration is hoping that tourism will help the state address its population decline.

Skiers and snowboarders at Sugarbush ski resort in Warren on Thursday. Photo by Mark Johnson/VTDigger

โ€œWhen we increase the number of visitors to Vermont, we introduce more people to all we have to offer,โ€ Scott said. โ€œGood jobs, opportunities for investment, a safe place to raise and have a family.โ€

Scott and Wendy Knight, commissioner of the state Department of Tourism and Marketing, released a study carried out every two years that shows some data about visitors and where they spend their money. The most visitors, 21 percent, come from Massachusetts; next are New York (17 percent), Connecticut (9 percent), New Jersey (7 percent) and New Hampshire (7 percent).

Among second home owners, 25 percent have a primary residence in New York, 19 percent in Massachusetts, 9 percent in Connecticut, 8 percent in Florida, and 6 percent in New Jersey, the report showed. A full 20 percent of Vermont housing is second home ownership, the report said. Second home visitation rose 3 percent between 2015 and 2017. Fifty percent of second home property tax is generated from Vermontโ€™s southernmost four counties.

Knight said rooms receipts show a growing number of tourist stays, with a 14 percent increase between 2015 and 2017 โ€“ a jump due in part to Airbnb and other short-term rentals, which were included in the category for the first time. The report also showed that southbound traffic volume on Vermontโ€™s interstates on Sundays and holidays has increased 30 percent since 2008.

About 13.1 million people visited Vermont in 2017, with 7.8 million overnight stays, 42 percent of them at lodging, 30 percent at second homes, 24 percent with friends and family, and 4 percent at campgrounds. An analysis of credit card spending in 35 ski towns shows that outsiders are spending more than Vermonters in every season except spring, according to the study.

โ€œWhile all four seasons are important, winter really sets Vermont apart,โ€ said Scott. โ€œNew Hampshire and the New York Adirondacks and the Catskills donโ€™t show the strength we do. The Vermont brand is known and respected throughout the world.โ€

Win Smith, owner of Sugarbush ski resort, at a press conference on tourism at Sugarbush on Thursday. Photo by Anne Wallace-Allen/VTDigger

Both Scott and Win Smith, the owner of Sugarbush, spoke of some factors that are slowing growth: a lack of employees, and a shortage of housing. Vermont has 15,000 fewer workers now than it did in 2009, Scott said.

โ€œThe first thing people are asking in job interviews is, โ€˜Do you have housing? Housing I can afford?โ€™” said Smith, adding that the resort has created housing for 130 employees.

Scott said the stateโ€™s Stay to Stay program, launched this year as a way to show Vermont visitors their options for moving to the state, will continue in the coming year. He said of 140 visitors who participated this year, 44 have moved to Vermont or say they plan to.

โ€œWhat it tells me is those types of incentives work,โ€ Scott said. โ€œWe want to build upon that. We should use that as an example of what we can do as we think outside the box, and find creative ways to attract people to the state.โ€

Meanwhile, ski area operators and tourism officials are looking at the week ahead, where unseasonably warm temperatures and rain are forecast.

โ€œWeโ€™ve had a really good five-week run, but this is northern New England and itโ€™s volatile,โ€ said Smith. โ€œWeโ€™re going to see that this weekend unfortunately. Itโ€™s coming early enough so I think we can recover in time for the Christmas holidays.โ€

Anne Wallace Allen is VTDigger's business reporter. Anne worked for the Associated Press in Montpelier from 1994 to 2004 and most recently edited the Idaho Business Review.