dreamer17555
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2007
- Messages
- 3,301
A holding room for my son with autism would be a non starter. Could you imagine multiple children or adults with special needs being held in a small area for 45 minutes where maybe one child needs to vocalize loudly and another needs to spin and one needs quiet? That would be unbearable for my son. And how does that work for single parents?I think something like this could work with some tweaking. Waiting in a holding area with the ability to switch from standing to sitting, room to move around, ability to eat and drink if needed, room to service medical equipment, and a bathroom nearby, that's reasonable.
The only thing I'm not sure about is solo travelers and groups of 2. I feel like there should be a way to allow both to wait together in the room, and then say, "Hey, the wait is 45 minutes, you can come out of this room and ride in 45 minutes." because it seems unfair to make the disabled person wait alone for hours. If I'm disabled and I go to Disney with my friend, I don't want to spend more than 50% of it alone. If it was a one off thing, it would be ok, but it's like wait 1 hour to ride for 2 minutes on every ride in the park, so you might as well go solo if you will be separated from your group for most of the day.
Holding rooms would be a great idea and cut down on abuse. You can't ride anything else if you are in a holding room, so it diminishes the attractiveness of faking.
The problem is the current child swap rooms are tiny and in no way ready to handle the volume of people this solution would lead to.
Some of these solutions so worried about abuse (especially when there is a 50/50 chance that Disney is just going to sell more genie+\LL to fill in any space left by fewer DAS guests) is really throwing the baby out with the bath water.