Avalanche science program earns international attention

Avalanche science program students at conference in Innsbruck, Austria.
CMC avalanche science program students Rich Rogers and Tara Vessella at the recent International Snow Science Workshop 2018 in Innsbruck, Austria. Photo Kelly Elder

By Mike McKibbin

LEADVILLE — For a two-year-old, Colorado Mountain College’s avalanche science program gets around. You could say it has gone international.

Two second-year students and two faculty members participated in the recent International Snow Science Workshop 2018 in Innsbruck, Austria. Students Rich Rogers and Tara Vessella made the trek to Europe with Dr. Ethan Greene, director of the Colorado Avalanche Information Center, and Dr. Kelly Elder, U.S. Forest Service research hydrologist.

The conference brings together researchers and practitioners worldwide and rotates among the U.S., Europe and Canada. The goal is to offer an exchange of ideas and experiences between snow science researchers and practitioners.

At the conference, CMC student Rogers, who works on the ski patrol at Monarch Ski Area, and Vessella, a backcountry ranger at Rocky Mountain National Park, answered questions about a poster that outlined the college’s program.

Innsbruck, Austria
Four faculty members and students from Colorado Mountain College’s avalanche science program traveled to Innsbruck, Austria to attend the ISSW conference, which offers an exchange of ideas between snow science researchers. Photo Rich Rogers

“It was not a scientific presentation, but the poster presented the CMC program to the international community,” said Roger Coit, program faculty leader at CMC Leadville.

Coit called CMC’s avalanche science program “a novel model, perhaps the only one of its kind in the world,” and the only one of this duration and content. Students take courses online and make three multi-day visits throughout each winter season to the college’s 10,200-foot-elevation campus in Leadville. On campus and in the rugged mountains that overlook the campus, they meet for intensive classroom time and field studies.

While in Austria, Rogers and Vessella also gained contacts and networked with industry officials. These interactions can help the students land jobs after they graduate from CMC with certificates of occupational proficiency as snow, weather and avalanche field technicians, Coit noted. He said many industry employers are already requesting students for internships and job placement.

“The industry folks find out the skills and talents of our students are what they need for their operation,” he said. “We are preparing students in fundamental workplace safety practices so that they can have long and rewarding careers.”

Coit said the CMC program “is definitely making a footprint with the industry,” partly due to participation in workshops such as ISSW.

“We’ve been very well received across the industry and the work of our students is showing the success of the program,” he said. “We’re making waves.”