I am going to leave the thread closed, but am responding to some of the statements made
I'm not a lawyer either, but I do spend considerable amount of time in a legal environment (for work), and at least from my reading of the orders and the specific language contained therein,
I believe there was confirmation that Disney's disability system, as it pertains to autism, provides reasonable accommodations if it contains both the DAS and Readmission passes. That I believe was clear to me from the plain language. I suppose with anything, someone can reach a different legal conclusion, but I see the logic and reasoning in the orders for this position. Perhaps Disney at some point will answer this question.
I am on vacation, so don't have time to look up quotes...
I would disagree with your interpretation.
The person bringing the first lawsuit settled alleged that:
- they could not experience the Disney parks under DAS
- the only way they could experience Disney parks would be with Guest Assistance Card the way it existed in the past (present the card, enter the attraction)
- that Disney was not doing individual assessments of need
The judge ruled for Disney on all those points and dismissed the case.
The reason that DAS AND readmission passes are mentioned are that is what the person had available to them, not that both were required in order to meet the ADA.
Providing both DAS and 8 re-admission passes to all guests with autism would mean no individual assessments of need were done. Different people who filed some of the other lawsuits got different numbers of readmission passes and some got none at all, which further points to readmission passes not being part of the DAS program.
Readmission passes are a Guest recovery tool, given out for various reasons.
For example, we are at WDW right now and were given readmission passes twice during this trip.
Both times were when the wheelchair accessible ride car, which my daughter needs to ride, was broken so we could not use our Fastpasses. We were NOT given anytime-any attraction Fastpasses on those occasions. We were given Fastpasses for nearby things with short waits (Turtle Talk, Mickey's Philharmagic).
The only time I can remember getting one (not multiple) we could use any time was after the bus we were on got sideswiped by a car trying to turn into the lane the bus was already in. Between the accident, waiting for police, getting reports from each rider, getting a new bus and getting a wheelchair off the bus without using the ramp, it took over 2 hours of our time. Each passenger was given one anytime re-admission pass, and there were some limits on what it could be used for.
This isn't always the case. As mentioned in a earlier post, I know from personal experience that accommodations can be given in advance.
I do know that in the beginning of DAS in October of 2013 thru early 2014, Disney was giving additional accommodations ahead of time when people contacted them. That was meant to be a temporary accommodation to help people as they learned how to use the new DAS program.
My understanding is that they stopped giving them to NEW people who requested them after that point because people were using them to simulate how GAC worked and were not even trying DAS.
I believe the judgements/orders referenced by the Dogali letter are the existing ones. From my own legal experience, dismissals are not always the same as losing a case, it really depends on the specific language involved. Looking at some specific language of one of the orders, it states that the:
"existing disability program - a combination of the DAS and distribution of readmission passes – does not violate the ADA"
This language is repeated in multiple instances. Does this mean that in order to not violate ADA the system must include both DAS and readmission passes? That is clearly what that judge believes comprised the existing disability program when the ruling was made, and which led them to conclude it doesn't violate ADA. Again, that is one way all of this can be read and I believe logical.
No - it does not mean that both DAS plus readmission passes are
necessary to meet the ADA.
It only means that the DAS and readmission passes the plaintiff could have used did not violate the ADA. The plaintiff was alleging that DAS and/or DAS plus readmission passes did NOT meet the ADA and the only way to meet it would be to return to GAC and allow the plaintiff immediate access. The judge did not agree with that.
I am not sure where your quote is from (? the appeal written by the attorney?), but Disney testified that readmission passes were
not part of the DAS program and that quoted wording is not part of the Judge's rulings that I read.
Many people on the Disboards, Facebook groups and other forums have been able to work with DAS, including people with autism. Most did not use readmission passes or used them early in the process until they learned how DAS worked.
Not all people with the same condition, including autism, have the same needs. So, it would be an unreasonable accommodation to say that only DAS plus readmission passes meets ADA.
On the one you are quoting it only pertains to that plaintiff and actually says that the readmit passes plus the DAS gives them a greater experience then the standard patron. It also goes on to say that since the defendant can enter another line while holding a DAS return time again they are having an experience that another guest can not have by default.
That is an accurate summary from reading the decision.
The decision actually said "a combination of DAS and readmission passes could have afforded Plaintiff access to the attractions on his preferred list"