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- Oct 27, 2011
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- 24,291
The website still indicates "as soon as 30 days in advance of a park visit." I'm not sure it matters whether that is 30 days from 1st park day, 30 days from last park day, or the week prior or even just a day prior. Without Advanced Selections there really is no particular incentive to do it at the earliest time allowed. And the 2-day bit has been removed, so registration can even be done the day prior. If one waits to do it onsite it will still be via video chat on an iPad. We don't know if that will be an immediate/near-immediate access to the Accessibility Team or if it drops you into the same queue as all the online folks.do you still need to register 30 days before your 1st day of your trip if the new das is good for 100 days?
We have a trip in august, i emailed the disability team and got a cut and paste back of the website but wasnt clear.
That wording around type of condition reads a little more open to me than it has previously been, hopefully a good sign.
I don't believe that wording has changed in the past month or so. This is what I had quoted back on April 11th:Oh, much better wording, Disney! Commas are important, lol!
...intended to accommodate those Guests who, due to a developmental disability like autism or similar, are unable to wait in a conventional queue for an extended period of time.
https://disneyworld.disney.go.com/guest-services/accessing-attractions-queues/#aa-queue-reentryWhere is this on the website? I don't see it.
To be fair... if one must leave the queue for the rest of the day there is no line accommodation that will help. And honestly, if I have to leave the line and be gone for an extended time, my family should continue in the queue and ride. Except in certain circumstances such as single parent, etc. there's no reason that can't occur. The accommodation is for the individual not for the family. Let's see how this plays out.This was and is still my concern: have the CMs received adequate training to discern what disabilities can be accommodated by a “brief” leaving of the line vs. those that will need to be one for hours, or even the rest of the day?
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