A view looking a half-mile east along U.S. Highway 212 from the center of Cooke City, Montana, ends at the edge of an 8-mile section of road left unplowed in winter to benefit snowmobile riders. Most residents are asking government officials in Montana and Wyoming to plow the road year-round. (Ruffin Prevost/WyoFile)
This story was first published by WyoFile on Aug. 28, 2024.
CODY, Wyoming —A newly released public opinion study suggests a potential thaw in a long-frozen disagreement over winter access to the vast snowy playground around the Northeast Entrance to Yellowstone National Park. But working out a long-term compromise is likely to be difficult, time-consuming and costly.
A series of surveys commissioned by local tourism boards in Park County, Wyoming, and southern Montana conducted over the last two years shows that a majority of residents would like to see an 8-mile section of U.S. Highway 212 plowed. Plowing it while adding improvements for snow-machine travel could entice significant numbers of new winter visitors, the survey showed, with only a minimal drop in snowmobile riders, who make up the majority of winter users.
“The plug,” as the segment is known, has traditionally been left snow-covered for use by snowmobile riders as a connector route to access a huge swath of backcountry powder and trails. The route straddles the Montana/Wyoming border, with approximately four miles lying in each state.
Some snowmobile riders oppose plowing a section of road straddling the Wyoming/Montana border, saying it serves as a vital trail between backcountry riding areas. Most area residents want the road plowed to allow for auto access. (Courtesy of the Montana Office of Tourism and Business Development)
The only road in Yellowstone open to cars during the winter leads from Gardiner, Montana, through the park’s northern range to a dead end at the plug, just east of Cooke City, Montana. Plowing the plug would allow winter auto access for the first time in decades through the entire Northeast Entrance Road from both sides of the park.
But one caveat, cited by Jake Jorgenson of RRC Associates, the Colorado-based research firm that conducted the surveys, is that the clear majority in favor of plowing includes a combination of respondents who want to plow with no additional accommodations, as well as those who favor plowing only after additional parking areas and an alternate connector trail for over-snow travel are built.
“I think this topic, as we all know, has been a difficult topic for years. But I think what we’ve seen is there is room for compromise, and there’s not only two options,” Jorgenson said during an online presentation last week to members of the Park County Travel Council in Cody, and Yellowstone Country, the tourism board covering a five-county region in Montana that includes Cooke City, Gardiner, Livingston, Bozeman, Red Lodge and West Yellowstone.
A compromise did not seem not out of the question to Bert Miller, a member of the Cody Country Snowmobile Association, and also of Protect Our Plug, a group formed to counter the growing efforts of plowing advocates in Cooke City and Cody.
“It looks like there’s a reasonable way to start looking at this. I’m not saying it’s something we can flip a switch on, but to promote snowmobiling and other industries — it’s very interesting,” Miller said.
Working together to develop parking, new snowmobile trail
Tim Weamer, who handles marketing for the Red Lodge Chamber of Commerce and whose son owns a gas station in Cooke City, said there was “no reason not to” work together to develop parking and a new snowmobile trail.
“I think that would go a long way to reducing the animosity in the town, as well as people working together to an end goal that has positive outcomes,” said Weamer, who has been active on the Park Access Recommendation Committee, a pro-plowing group.
Weamer and Miller agreed that maintaining a steering committee of local residents formed to guide the study would be a positive step toward reaching a compromise.
Jorgenson said survey results show 89% of regional residents in Wyoming would be as likely or more likely to travel to the Northeast Entrance to visit Yellowstone in the winter after plowing and improvements.
But only approximately 10% or fewer of regional residents from both states would be less likely to visit or recreate there after plowing.
A series of surveys commissioned by local tourism boards in Park County, Wyoming and southern Montana conducted over the last two years shows that a majority of residents would like to see an 8-mile section of U.S. Highway 212 plowed.
“They’re still going to come, because, honestly, the area has such great riding and snow, it’s still an amazing area,” Jorgenson said.
The idea of plowing the plug has come up every few years for decades, said Cody tour guide Bob Richard, a former Yellowstone Park ranger who has advocated plowing since the 1980s.
Richard and other proponents say thousands of new visitors would travel through the picturesque Lamar Valley to watch bison, wolves and other wildlife. They also say public safety is a factor, citing a shorter distance to Cody for emergency care. And they say a range of other winter recreation besides snowmobiling would see a boost if visitors could reach the area from the east by car.
Opponents of plowing have maintained that it would hamper snowmobile access to world-class trails and drastically change the character of Cooke City and Silver Gate, which are small, isolated, unincorporated mountain towns where some winter residents prize the solitude that comes with being at the literal end of the trail.
Others have worried that if U.S. Highway 212 is open to cars in the winter, the National Park Service might stop plowing from Gardiner to the Northeast Gate, which lies just west of Silver Gate.
Yellowstone Superintendent Cam Sholly has given multiple assurances in public forums that he would continue to plow that section of the park’s roads. But he has also said he will not plow the plug, citing the lack of a federal mandate or the budget to support it. A decision by local and state agencies to plow would be unlikely to affect winter management policies inside the park, Sholly has said.
Opponents say plowing would ruin character of the area in winter
Aaron Mulkey, a professional ice climber who lives in Cody and has property in Cooke City, was among the minority of those who oppose plowing regardless of changes or improvements.
“I truly believe it ruins the experience and vibe of the town,” he said. “Cooke City in the winter is a unique destination. Plow the road, and it’s just like any other mountain town in the winter.”
A lone pickup truck is parked near the Miners Saloon in Cooke City, Montana. Wheeled vehicles reach a dead end blocked by snow nearby, and must return 55 miles by the same route to the park’s North Entrance in Gardiner, Montana. (Ruffin Prevost/WyoFile)
An economic analysis by Jorgenson projected that plowing the road with improvements would amount to a drop of less than 1% in total winter tourism revenue, he said. That’s assuming no new visitors would be attracted as a result of plowing, he said, ignoring new auto traffic likely to be drawn to Yellowstone.
Ted Blair, CEO of Blair Hotels in Cody, said that “opening the Northeast entrance to Yellowstone in the winter would be enormous for Park County.”
“The opportunity to drive through the Lamar Valley from Cody during the winter would offer unprecedented opportunities for wildlife viewing and photography,” said Blair, whose company is the town’s largest lodging partner for group tours and bus travel to Yellowstone. “It is something many of our tour clients have expressed interest in over the last few years.”
But moving forward with a plan to create a new snowmobile trail that runs parallel to the plug, as well as developing the necessary additional parking areas needed to accommodate more vehicles stopping at different spots, will be a complex and lengthy process. It will require an extensive environmental review process mandated by federal regulations.
An alphabet soup of agencies have jurisdictional control or considerable input over the matter, including two state transportation departments, two national forests, two counties in separate states, two governors’ offices, and the National Park Service.
The high-altitude hillsides along the highway are home to a range of sensitive species, including grizzly bears, gray wolves and Canada lynx. Construction there would be costly, logistically difficult and environmentally challenging.
Equally thorny would be the expenses and responsibilities for plowing the plug. No agency has produced a solid estimate of the likely annual cost.
Directors of both states’ local tourism boards said they plan to remain involved in further discussions about a potential compromise, and that the survey offers a chance to find common ground on changes that could help communities across the region.
Shaleas Harrison, a Wyomingite who has worked to organize Montana plowing advocates, acknowledged the complexity of finding a compromise, but said the survey offered solid data to build on.
“Maybe for the first time, there can be some productive dialogue from the community members as a result of the information presented here,” she said.
Editor’s note: Ruffin Prevost serves on the Park County Travel Council. The group does not have a position on plowing.