rkujay said:
It is important to note that the previously mentioned storms...Jean, Frances, et al were not huge storms of the Andrew and Katrina variety. We live no more than 55 miles from WDW and had virtually NO damage whatsoever. By comparison, the amount of snapped trees and neighborhood damage in the WDW area (we have a son who lives in the Orlando area) was a real eye opener. Since we had no damage we went to WDW just after each storm to see what was up at our beloved WDW. The storms relative small size made them localized.
God help us all if a really big one decides to come through.
These big storms are NOT tourist attractions.
We were there for Charlie...not the level of Katrina or Andrew, of course, but it was still a 4 when it got to Orlando...which is pretty HUGE for that far inland (from what we were told). What happened in N.O. last year is very, very unlikely to occur as far inland as WDW (knocking on wood here).
Disney left the parks open until 1 p.m. the day it hit (Friday the 13th, no less---August 2004). Parks were great and very empty...it was interesting to see the CMs preparing, and the CMs that were there were really eager to do their jobs (plus I heard they got to bring their families onsite, and Disney really is the SAFEST place to be if you're in a hurricane).
When they closed, we did witness some not-so-great bus behavior, but just from one very loud person.
We were staying at CSR that year, so we needed to take care of things quickly since we'd have to stay in our room since it has outdoor corridors (we no longer stay in hotels with the outdoor corridors...in part because of this). This was the first hurricane to make it into Orlando since Disney had been there, and the foodcourts weren't as ready as others have reported! They were running out of food and the line for the foodcourt went from Pepper Market all the way to the lobby (if you've been to CSR...you know that's long!). The gift shop had a very limited amount and HUGE lines. We discovered the vending machine, although we had some in our room from a grocery stop and we'd eaten at The Land before we left the parks (which we were glad we did!). Food didn't end up being a big deal but we were a little concerned at the time! We do like to have something in our room now, just in case.
Disney handled it beautifully, though! For the time guests could still go to the main building, there were characters, as others have mentioned. They started running continuous movies on several channels. A CM came around to rooms just before lockdown to let us know what was happening and make sure we understood and were doing okay. He also gave us an info sheet with details on the lockdown as well as the movies to keep us occupied.
The actual storm...being from the midwest, there were a couple of tornados accompanying it, and THAT we understood. There were broken tree limbs, people had car damage, a few people did die...but it was because of lightning and being in cars, I think? Or perhaps fallen power lines. Things to be very careful of, for sure, but not things that are likely to happen to you at Disney. We saw a number of roofs blown off hotels on our way to the airport, so being on-site is a really good thing.
Parks opened the next day with very little in the way of crowds (walked on to TOT more times than we could count), except AK because that took longer to clean up.
Would I plan my vacation in hopes of a hurricane? Definitely NOT! Would I cancel or panic because there MIGHT be one? No way! Just make sure you have some water and food in your room if you're concerned. And as someone pointed out, they really don't know what these storms are going to do quite so far out.
I should qualify this...if you're staying off-site, I would be a little more concerned. Disney is built to withstand, but some others are not.