What about this? “
The district court determined that Disney had proved that modifications to the DAS card would have to be uniformly applied to all DAS guests. ”
I don't think that part taken out of context means what it sounds like it means. It does NOT mean that Disney can only have DAS forever or any changes made to DAS in the future have to be the same for everybody.
At the time of the case, Disney ONLY had DAS for guest-specific disability accommodation (other than the physical ramps having been added for everyone). So if the lawsuit were to force them the change DAS for the person in the trial, they would have to apply it to everyone. If the guest won the suit and they just tried to give the instant return passes to that 1 guest, everyone with similar issues would have stepped right up in line to make their own lawsuit, as it would be a slam dunk case.
It was 0% accommodation (normal) or 100% accommodation (DAS), nothing else. If you change DAS here it changes for everyone
Now they will have 0%, 1%, 2%, 3%, 4%....accommodation all the way to 100% accommodation (what used to be DAS). Now, if they change rules for one of the steps (rider-swap, bathroom passes, etc.) they will have to apply the rules to everyone receiving that accommodation at that step.
It just means you change the rules equally for everyone under each umbrella. We are just going to have a lot more, but smaller umbrellas. (And it sounds like rain is a'comin!)
It doesn't mean what it sounds like it means.
There is quite a bit of stuff in the lawsuits to understand.
GAC = Guest Assistance Card. This was the program that was in place right before DAS. It had multiple stamps, which provided different accommodations, based on needs.
At first, people got it mostly by a CM at an attraction noticing them having a problem and sending them to Guest Relations. That was how my daughter got it the first time.
As time went on, more information was on the Internet, including detailed info on how to get the "best" stamp - the green arrow, which was meant for kids on Wish trips. There was another stamp for alternate entry, which did not apply to ALL attractions, just those with inaccessible queues. Both of those stamps allowed immediate entry into the attraction, but because guests often had multiple stamps, it was confusing for guests and CMs, so most people were just sent into the
Lightning Lane.
The card had a name and number of guests, but no other ID. People often sold them as 'never expiring Fastpasses"
DAS = the program which replaced GAC. The biggest change was that it removed immediate entry into attractions and replaced it with a waiting period roughly equal to the currently postly wait time.
It removed all the stamps; guests who needed special seating or things like avoiding stairs were to ask the CM at the entry. It started as a paper card and added a picture of the guest to the paper card, so harder for someone other than the registered person to use.
It was in place, pretty much unchanged from 2013 to now, other than going digital and allowing advance video registration and 2 DAS Advance Selections per day.
Plaintiffs in the case = families of people with autism who had the green or alternate entry stamps and were used to basically going into all attractions with waiting.
They claimed that ALL people with autism can't experience what they called 'idle wait time' and needed to move from one attraction to the next of their choice without waiting for anything.
They claimed that DAS caused idle wait time and could not meet their needs. Many did not even try the program at all.
What they wanted in the lawsuit was for Disney to go back to GAC ONLY for people with autism. If they had to be under DAS, the wanted Disney to give ALL People with autism a number of immediate entry passes.
The study (from my understanding) was NOT to look at the average DAS user (whatever that might be - my own family considers a very successful day to be 4 hours long and do 3-4 attractions). It was trying to simulate what the plaintiffs claimed they needed -no wait time, go from attraction to attraction at will, hitting as many attractions as possible.
The study showed that extending no wait for any attraction or DAS with multiple immediate entry passes per day to anyone with autism would severely affect park operations.
So, it wasn't that Disney didn't want to provide DAS; they wanted DAS to apply to everyone