Local group expected to acquire Burke Mountain ski resort

Skiers and snowboarders play in fresh snow In February 2019 under the Mid-Burke Express chair lift at Burke Mountain. The East Burke, Vt., ski area is known for classic trails and glades. (Courtesy Burke Mountain)

Skiers and snowboarders play in fresh snow In February 2019 under the Mid-Burke Express chair lift at Burke Mountain. The East Burke, Vt., ski area is known for classic trails and glades. (Courtesy Burke Mountain)

FILE - In this Sept. 1, 2016, file photo, the Lodge at Burke Mountain is pictured on the day it officially opened in East Burke, Vt. The new hotel and conference center at the Vermont ski resort is one of several new amenities and offerings around the Northeast this ski season, including more snowmaking and more options for off-slope activities. (AP Photo/Lisa Rathke, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 1, 2016, file photo, the Lodge at Burke Mountain is pictured on the day it officially opened in East Burke, Vt. The new hotel and conference center at the Vermont ski resort is one of several new amenities and offerings around the Northeast this ski season, including more snowmaking and more options for off-slope activities. (AP Photo/Lisa Rathke, File) Lisa Rathke

By HABIBSABET

VtDigger

Published: 04-04-2025 4:02 PM

A local group that includes longtime Burke Mountain benefactors and community stakeholders is on the cusp of acquiring the Northeast Kingdom ski resort, according to people familiar with the deal. 

The group, Bear Den Partners LLC, includes members of the Graham family, who have previously invested heavily in the mountain, as well as Willy Booker, head of Burke Mountain Academy, an elite training school for skiers in the area. Bear Den Partners also includes Jon Schafer, owner of the Berkshire East Mountain Resort in Massachusetts, who would oversee resort operations at the mountain if the takeover bid proves successful. 

Details about the group’s attempt to acquire Burke were first reported in the Caledonian Record. 

In an interview with VtDigger Wednesday, Ken Graham, chairman and co-founder of Bear Den Partners, emphasized that a deal had not been finalized but confirmed the group was attempting to buy the beloved Northeast Kingdom resort and invest heavily in its development.

“We’re not trying to change the culture and the ethos and everything that makes Burke special,” Graham said. “The mountain is separate from the whole corporate ski experience that’s growing all over the country. It’s sort of back to the roots of why people love skiing in the first place, and that’s what we want to protect and build.”

An overview of Bear Den Partners’ vision for the resort shared with VtDigger outlines sweeping plans to upgrade the mountain’s snowmaking and chairlift infrastructure, expand trail access and renovate the resort’s mountain-side hotel. “It’s needed this kind of investment for a long, long time,” Graham said.

The details of the prospective acquisition come just a month after Michael Goldberg, the court-appointed receiver of Burke Mountain, announced he was in the process of “finalizing” a deal to sell the Northeast Kingdom resort to an anonymous party. 

At the time, Goldberg denied claims from investors Todd Firestone and Mark Greenberg that he was ignoring their bid, saying that he had found a buyer that “has deep roots in the community and will insure (sic) that Burke Mountain will have the stable future it deserves.”

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Goldberg did not immediately respond to VtDigger’s requests for comment Wednesday.  

If a contract is signed, the federal judge overseeing the mountain’s receivership would need to sign off on the agreement. If completed, the deal would cap Goldberg’s almost decade-long attempt to successfully sell the property.

The lawyer was appointed receiver of Burke Mountain and Jay Peak, another Northeast Kingdom resort, in 2016 in the wake of a financial scandal, after the resort’s former owner, Ariel Quiros, was indicted for defrauding investors.