Just for a bit of info most don’t have about mask wearing. I wasn’t sure about sharing but after some thought, felt it couldn’t hurt.
@rteetz please feel free to delete if you feel to - no offense will be taken

I just had to do a training at work on the use of masks and the safe proper handling & wear of both surgical and homemade masks. It was facilitated by our public health unit with written guidance from our federal government public health unit.
Mask wearing is not as simple as covering your mouth and nose & hoping for the best.
Only 95N masks will keep out droplet and secretion infections - all 95N masks are now restricted to use by first responders.
Any gaps or a mask not worn snuggly poses a risk for contamination. Both for those wearing a mask to save an exposure and those who may have been exposed but don’t feel sick or sick enough to stay home. Airborne/droplets are drawn by breathing in and if the mask has no seal or is not well fitted it doesn’t do what it is supposed to.
Touching your mask to adjust or re- adjust (in the heat of the day in the parks..) puts any contaminant directly on to your mask from your hands, most of the masks that will be in use are porus enough for an exposure - the length of time the virus lives on a soft surface is longer then on hard surfaces.
Big one here for theme parks.. you need to change masks once the one you are wearing becomes wet, soiled or can’t be snuggly worn. In the heat you perspire, and just breathing into your mask in & out of air conditioning can also create moisture..
Handling your mask is another concern in a theme park setting.. to put it on and adjust & after you take it off - you need to have clean sanitized hands. Not hands that have been on railings, counter service counters, grab bars on rides etc.. again - cross contamination. How many hand washing stations or sanitizer stations will that require. Cross contamination from surface to mask is a real and is a high risk situation.
These are just a few things that disney needs to look into & plan for. There are quite a few more take aways from my recent eye opener training... but in a theme park setting these are the ones that seem most relevant.
fwiw.. You’d probably be better off if you are just aware of your surroundings and social distancing & hand washing or using hand sanitizer frequently.