The longtime operator of Star Plunge aquatic center in Hot Springs State Park has sued the state after Wyoming State Parks selected a new concessionaire to run the hot-spring facility.  

The complaint, filed Aug. 5 in Laramie County District Court, accuses the Wyoming Department of State Parks of exceeding its authority and violating regulations when it selected the new operator this spring. 

That selection essentially evicts the Luehne family from Star Plunge, a popular Wyoming tourist attraction it has run since 1975. At the end of 2024 — when Roland Luehne’s current management agreement expires — the new company, Wyoming Hot Springs LLC, will take over. 

Wyoming State Parks intends to make the handoff without properly compensating Luehne’s company, C & W Enterprises, for the improvements it’s made to the facility, the complaint alleges. The suit requests that a judge declare the state’s actions null and void. 

“C & W has invested millions of dollars into the Star Plunge facilities over the past several decades,” the suit reads. “Despite those investments and C & W’s ownership of all improvements at the Star Plunge, State Parks deprived C & W of a fair opportunity to compete in the bidding process and seeks to deprive C & W of its property without compensation and any meaningful public notice or due process.”

The suit is the latest in a chain of landlord-tenant disagreements between the state and Star Plunge involving lease terms, contract language and deferred maintenance. 

Visitors walk the boardwalk at Hot Springs State Park, as seen from across the Bighorn River in May 2024. (Katie Klingsporn/WyoFile)

Since the new operator was announced, Luehne and loyal Star Plunge patrons have expressed outrage that the state would boot a family business in favor of an operator they fear will raise prices. 

State Parks defends its process as transparent, above board and in the best interests of the community and state. Hot Springs State Park is the gem of the state’s system, and it’s time to update the aging infrastructure to meet modern demands, State Parks officials and supporters say. 

In a state where generations of families grew up visiting the pools, the issue has sparked debates that pit nostalgia and local-business values against modernity and outsider ideas. 

Nearly 50 years of business

Hot Springs State Park is centered on the banks of the Bighorn River, where mineral-rich water gushes from several springs and over terraces. 

The original 1-square-mile park land was established through a treaty between the Shoshone and Arapaho tribes and the U.S. government. The feds purchased the land in 1896, and ceded the “Big Horn Reserve” to the state in 1897 on the stipulation that there always be free public access to the waters. It operated as a reserve for more than three decades before becoming Hot Springs State Park, and predated the nearby town of Thermopolis. 

Unlike parks that offer wilderness experiences, Hot Springs’ eponymous springs were long ago developed into indoor and outdoor pools with steam rooms and slides, while parking lots and paved roads encircle the grounds. Two hotels today occupy its 1,100 acres, and it hosts an assortment of built infrastructure, including a hospital, county library, fairgrounds and schools. 

The park tallies more than 1.5 million annual visits, more than double any other in Wyoming’s system. And in a state with no permanent amusement parks, Hot Springs’ two aquatic facilities — Star Plunge and Tepee — have long drawn families with kids. 

As landlord, Wyoming holds concessionaire agreements with park operators. That includes the Star Plunge, Tepee and the two hotels. Wyoming also operates a state bathhouse, which is free and open to the public. 

A boy swims in the Star Plunge in May 2024. (Katie Klingsporn/WyoFile)

Wolfgang and Christine Luehne bought the Star Plunge in 1975, taking over a 50-year lease from the previous owner. Roland Luehne bought the Star Plunge from his parents in 2012. Their lease expired in 2008, and the Star Plunge has been operating on short-term agreements since. 

Attempts to ink a long-term contract were unsuccessful, but a 2019 law mandates that State Parks secure long-term leases with concessionaires.

In 2020, Wyoming put out a request for proposals for parties interested in operating new or improved lodging and aquatic facilities in the park. The idea was to secure long-term leases that support the 2016 Hot Springs State Park Master Plan, which envisions a more polished destination with modern recreation offerings.

“Today, some concessionaire operated facilities are deteriorated with extensive need for improvement and redevelopment,” the plan reads. “This plan encourages reinvestment in public and private facilities, replacing outdated features to prioritize life, health and safety; and offers opportunities for collaborative partnerships to meet the Division’s key mission of public benefit, resource protection, and high‐quality visitor experiences.” 

Luehne was the sole applicant in that initial round, but he and the state failed to reach an agreement. He was one of three applicants in round two, which opened in November. This time, the state opted for another applicant, Wyoming Hot Springs LLC.

That company’s bid proposes transforming Tepee into a spa and wellness center while enhancing facilities and the mid-century character of the Star Plunge with new slides, pools and a poolside diner. It also proposes rebuilding or renovating the Hot Springs Hotel with more rooms and upgraded dining areas. 

In the wake of the announcement, Luehne and supporters have cried foul. His family has poured all its energy into Star Plunge, he said; to be stripped of it without any compensation for that work is unjust. He called the process “a nightmare.”

However, others have celebrated the new operator as a way to bring forth needed improvements for facilities that haven’t changed much in generations. Swimmers at Star Plunge still splash down original slides built decades ago, for example. 

The Star Plunge was originally established as a wooden structure sometime between the 1890s and early 1900s, according to the Hot Springs Master Plan. Staff members say it was established even earlier. (Jasperdo/FlickrCC)

The state also wants to ensure critical deferred maintenance items that have gone for years unaddressed are taken care of, officials say.

“If Mr. Luehne had addressed all the issues we brought forward immediately over the years, and had attempted to negotiate in good faith with us on a lease … he could have been in the midst of a 25-year lease right now,” Outdoor Recreation Office and Division of State Parks Deputy Director Nick Neylon told WyoFile in June. “But he chose not to.”

Null and void

The lawsuit claims State Parks in 2021 essentially strong-armed Luehne into signing an agreement by threatening to close the Star Plunge over the busy July 4th holiday weekend. “You cannot operate the Star Plunge in the absence of a lease or agreement with State Parks,” that correspondence said. 

The state then violated its concession regulations when it put out its second RFP bid and did not require a new concessionaire to pay the former one for the value of the property, the suit says. That requirement was in the first RFP, the suit maintains, and set the minimum value at $1.4 million. 

The suit asks that State Parks start over and re-bid C & W’s concession prior to the expiration of the existing contract in “a manner that complies with the Concession Rules, and include a minimum amount that a successful bidder must pay to C & W as the current concessionaire.” 

Wyoming’s response to the lawsuit will be included in official court filings in the near future, Wyoming State Parks Bighorn Region District Manager Brooks Jordan told WyoFile in an email. The state is proceeding with the new operator, he said, with which it’s begun negotiations. 

“We continue to move forward with the process related to concession improvements at Hot Springs State Park,” Jordan wrote. 

Katie Klingsporn reports on outdoor recreation, public lands, education and general news for WyoFile. She’s been a journalist and editor covering the American West for 20 years. Her freelance work has...

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  1. Is this the kind of headlines we want to see about our local community in Thermopolis?

  2. I was born and raised in Thermopolis. I lived the first 18 years of my life there. My Dad, Wayne Tjepkes, did work for the Luehne’s both on their house on E. River Rd. and at Star Plunge. That family always and does take pride in providing to the local community and visitors from all over a great place to bring there families. I feel like we are under appreciating the true service that they have always provided. And yes it does cost money to do everything, including changing a little or a lot of the looks of things. We should all know that by now. And you are right change is good but only to a certain extent. Let the community be involved with the ideas of what they feel should or shouldn’t be the face of change in our beautiful Hot Springs State Park. But let the Luehne’s and Leyba’s do what they do best, provide top notch atmosphere for the public. They are a classy and respectable family and have always represented our County that way as well.

  3. Hard to believe they invested millions in renovations when it is literally the same exact 3 rusty water slides that were there when I was a kid in the 90s. Maybe a new coat of paint otherwise in spots? Maybe the locker room was cleaned up a little bit in the last 15 years or so? And the place long ago ditched the arcades and snack bar which also gave it a level of charm that it lacks now.
    Personally I’m convinced that the only people who think the Star Plunge is still great are either under the age of 10 or are blinded by their own nostalgia for when they themselves were a kid going there and so gaslight themselves into thinking it is not crowded, dirty, boring and overpriced for what it is in its present form.
    Overall it seems like the guy got away with running a highly profitable operation on the back of the state and then the gravy train finally crashed and now he’s mad. The bigger mystery is how the racket (or I’m sorry, “lease”) lasted this long.

  4. My opinion is that the problem comes from conflating two roles: Owner and Operator/Lessee.
    In millions of leased units across the nation, the owner maintains and renovates properties and the Lessee pays the rent. It’s just a thought.

  5. My family and I have visited from Newcastle many times. I like it just the way it is quiet and small. A big corporate run park would simply ruin the appeal.

  6. Terrific reporting, Katie. Even-handed and above the fray in this contentious mess of a problem.

  7. We visited Hot Springs State Park in July. It was lovely, peaceful and historic. It would be a travesty to tear it up and change it for some misguided attempt at money-making. Some places should never be redone. The State should provide current owners with appropriate funding to maintain, but not destroy the historic value. It will be terrible if it changes into a ‘modern’ foofoo lala spa!

  8. I can see the court shutting down the Star Plunge on January 1st, 2025 and telling both parties that no one gets access to the Plunge until the suit is settled, which could take years.

  9. The decision to non-renew the Star’s lease is similar to the leasing of any state land. It should be managed for the best return for the people of the state. Was last at The Star in 2019. Then it was way behind the curve in what kids and adults expect in a pool/water park.

  10. Although I will somewhat miss the dive bar mystic of the Plunge, a long overdue change for a cherished state resource. A short trip to any modern water park in the US provides a quick lesson on how badly shortchanged the residents and surrounding business owners have been over the previous several decades.

  11. Anytime a Government gets involved it’s a disaster!!!… There used to be three pools in this area and they never talk about the “real History” of the pools in the Park. This guy and his family were fortunate to have had the opportunity to lease this property for so long. They own three mansions tucked away in the Red Hills beside the Buffalo Park… It’s hard to feel sorry for a mult-millionaire!!!… Its time to move on and let the Government mess things up… AND, they will!!!…

    1. There nothing wrong with the man being successful. We also don’t know full details of contract as far as who pays for upgrades etc. I would venture the state has final say so and likely shares in renovation. All fairness the mineral water will be very hard on all materials involved. Now everyone likes big new fancy do-dads but remember that drives up cost of playing and maintenance. After it year old it not new and exciting anymore. The man should get paid back something for the take over. All you “experts” had a chance to bid but didn’t as well.