Working through our first trip to the parks since all of the changes from the GAC and it hasn't been awful, but I guess I am walking away disillusioned by it all.
My 9yo daughter has a bunch of different things going on, but the bottom line is that she has fairly extreme issues with pain and fatigue and uses a personal stroller/wheelchair for any type of moderately long travel. She has also had multiple surgeries, has issues with incontinence, etc. - You guys get the picture.
I had already explained to her that Disney had made some changes and we were prepared for what happened: She got a tag for her "stroller" and was happily told that she would be able to participate in most of the mainstream lines and that sometimes they would even have special vehicles/lines that she could take her wheelchair into. I probably would have been fine, except...
1. Conversation held in line where we were told that you need to have **** (a particular disability) or you could forget about getting any type of assistance. I hate to say it, but my limited experience seemed to support that observation.
2. Under the old system, we mostly had the same wait for attractions. Sometimes we waited longer, and sometimes - for sure- we had a much shorter wait than the average guest. But, it mostly averaged out. Under this system, we almost always waited longer than the average guest (because we would have the normal stand-by line and then the "special" wheelchair line).
3. I get the idea that if someone has stamina issues they should use a wheelchair, but our issues go beyond that. My daughter can't make it through a standard school day (with modifications) without a two-hour nap in the middle of the day. We can't make rope drop, we can't do even close to a full day.
I totally get that it is not Disney's fault; but, due to the nature of my child's disability we are pretty much totally shut out of the fast pass system. Maybe it will be better when FP+ is fully rolled out, but as it stands the FP are either all gone or the times that are left can't work for her.
We don't want, need, or expect front-of-the-line access. OTOH, every other theme park I have been to has had something like the DAS for wheelchair users, too. I know Disney was probably overly generous in the past with the GAC, but now it seems like they've gone the other way.
So, we are doing what we've always done: Making the best of things and rolling with the punches. But, this is one mom, anyway, who is going to think long and hard about whether our annual trips to WDW are worth it anymore.
My 9yo daughter has a bunch of different things going on, but the bottom line is that she has fairly extreme issues with pain and fatigue and uses a personal stroller/wheelchair for any type of moderately long travel. She has also had multiple surgeries, has issues with incontinence, etc. - You guys get the picture.
I had already explained to her that Disney had made some changes and we were prepared for what happened: She got a tag for her "stroller" and was happily told that she would be able to participate in most of the mainstream lines and that sometimes they would even have special vehicles/lines that she could take her wheelchair into. I probably would have been fine, except...
1. Conversation held in line where we were told that you need to have **** (a particular disability) or you could forget about getting any type of assistance. I hate to say it, but my limited experience seemed to support that observation.
2. Under the old system, we mostly had the same wait for attractions. Sometimes we waited longer, and sometimes - for sure- we had a much shorter wait than the average guest. But, it mostly averaged out. Under this system, we almost always waited longer than the average guest (because we would have the normal stand-by line and then the "special" wheelchair line).
3. I get the idea that if someone has stamina issues they should use a wheelchair, but our issues go beyond that. My daughter can't make it through a standard school day (with modifications) without a two-hour nap in the middle of the day. We can't make rope drop, we can't do even close to a full day.
I totally get that it is not Disney's fault; but, due to the nature of my child's disability we are pretty much totally shut out of the fast pass system. Maybe it will be better when FP+ is fully rolled out, but as it stands the FP are either all gone or the times that are left can't work for her.
We don't want, need, or expect front-of-the-line access. OTOH, every other theme park I have been to has had something like the DAS for wheelchair users, too. I know Disney was probably overly generous in the past with the GAC, but now it seems like they've gone the other way.
So, we are doing what we've always done: Making the best of things and rolling with the punches. But, this is one mom, anyway, who is going to think long and hard about whether our annual trips to WDW are worth it anymore.