Post 13 in this thread was a summary. I'll try to find his post and offer a link. I don't think the site is banned.
Discussions with CMs and keeping count, for an hour or so, one attraction is interesting but not definitive.
post #13 didn't really say anything. Here it is
3% of guests were using the old GAC. The 3% accounted for 30% of the capacity of a then newish ride at DL (maybe TSM).
Anecdotal evidence suggests, at least part of the day, 40% of WDW haunted mansion capacity is for
DAS holders.
This was my reply to it in post #17
The old Guest Assistance Card (GAC) data can't be used to extrapolate to guests using DAS at WDW. The programs are very different and DL has a lot more day visitors - many with Annual Passes who go several times per week. Unless someone is observing right at the scan in point all day and can see that guests are scanning in using DAS, there is no way to tell. Anecdotal evidence is not reliable Evidence.
DAS has one accommodation - ability to wait outside of the regular line. The wait is based on the current posted wait in the Standby line; after waiting, the guest(s) using DAS return to the
Lightning Lane to enter the attraction. If I guest wants to go on the same attraction more than once, they need to wait a second time.
GAC had a number of different accommodations meant to address different disabilities. These were added as stamps to the cardboard GAC card. Stamps included things like first row seating, avoiding stairs, using an alternate entry (which could be the Fastpass line or the exit if the regular line wasn't accessible).
There was also a stamp for immediate access - a green arrow. It was intended for guests on Make a Wish trips, but a lot of people had that stamp, especially people with autism, who said they could not wait in line.
The attraction in question was Radiator Springs Racers at Disneyland and mostly involved the green arrow stamp. When it opened, it was noted that the Fastpass line was very long, much longer than expected. As a result, they were running out of Fastpasses much earlier in the day than expected. As CMs watched the line, they noticed large numbers of guests who were using the green arrow GAC, riding and getting right back into line to ride again multiple times.
That was NOT against the rules for the card they had, but was not the intended/expected use for it. So, a very small number of guests were riding over and over and using most of the ride capacity.
DAS addressed those issues in several ways:
- moved MAKE A WISH accommodation from Guest Relations in the parks to the wish granting organizations
- eliminated all the different accommodation stamps and simplified to one accommodation- waiting outside of the line a time roughly equal to the current wait in the Standby line.
- moved from a cardboard card to a digital version attached to the guests' Disney profile.
The waiting was what the DAS lawsuit was about. A group of guests whose children were autistic argued that DAS violated the ADA because they were not capable of waiting at all, inside or outside of the line and needed immediate access to all attractions. Disney won the lawsuit.