bumbershoot
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 69,750
The only way I could see Disney doing allowing it again is if Disney rents a space to the vendor (long term, like a multi-year lease minimum) for pick-up, drop-off and have the vendor staff the facility.
I’m certain that’s what they are heading towards.
I am ok with the changes. Our last few trips, the wait for bell services to come and pick up our bags was excessively long. Maybe now that the bell services staff doesn’t have to handle scooters and strollers, they can come up and handle luggage in a timely manner.
Seems unlikely.
Or, customers could meet the vendors outdoors. Plenty of room.
So people who cannot walk easily, and such conditions often go along with other conditions, are now supposed to wait outside, in the heat or cold, until their scooter gets there???
This makes me think ... what did everyone do 10 or 20 years ago?
They were 10-20 years younger. Their chronic conditions hadmt started or hadn’t worsened yet. They stayed home because maybe they didn’t realize how easy the world had made it to travel.
Seems to be a lot more people using these than in the past.
Yep. Isn’t it nice that they are available?
It is never a good idea to make things more difficult for people with disabilities. What is a single mom with mobility issues and young children supposed to do? Is she just not supposed to take her kids anymore to Disney if she can’t guarantee when she will arrive or if she is unable to pay a premium for the ecv company Disney partners with?
The person you were responding to was suggesting that the person get a scooter for home use and to bring that. Not that there was nothing to be done.
don't get me started on having to reserve FPs.
Isn’t that easier for those with mobility issues? So you don’t have to run around getting paper FPs?
Planning and going on a WDW vacation now feels a lot more like work than it does an actual vacation.
And has felt like that since my first trip in 2010!
We don’t really use a stroller at home
We didn’t use one at all at home, but bought one to take on Disneyland trips. Brought it for our first Workd trip when my son was 6, let it be his decision, and we never unfolded it at all. It was just something-in-the-corner at home, but useful at Disneyland.
Well, as the baby boomers start aging
They already are aging.

If you are arriving by air you may have to make your flights at a time that allowed you to meet with the vendor.
I feel like maybe you don’t fly or fly from the easy coast. When you get further away there are fewer options. And then there are delays...
I would love to know the date of this article.
Isn’t that the article from when they first made the precious changes? I think it was posted in response to a different question.
we hate to wait at the airport for them, because airlines are not exactly gentle on strollers
Gate check it and make sure you’re getting it at the ramp.
On our last trip, DH’s knee swelled up like a balloon on our last day. He got back to our room, but the next morning was in lots of pain. We called bell services for our luggage and told them about it. The bell services guy drove him on one of their golf carts to the ME pickup spot.
Would those be an option for people who arrive late at night and need to get to their room?
Not an option at the resorts with interior corridors.
Best travel advice I have ever heard, used, or recommended is to pack everything needed for your first 24 hours in carry on luggage.
So you have your carryons, your room isn’t ready, you want to go do something, you stash them with Bell, you come back ready to change for dinner, you call down to get the carryons, and... it takes an hour or more.
I'm surprised you haven't heard of Cloud of Goods Mobility. They come highly recommended by people right here on the DIS.
I check those threads and never heard of them Fwiw.
Same with a scooter. I remember when you might see 1 or 2 scooters on your whole trip. There were still disabled and elderly people there. I guess they either rented a mobility device from Disney, brought their own or maybe just used a wheelchair.
Or maybe they were decades younger and didn’t need them.
This also brings up an ADA issue as well. Especially if someone needs a wheelchair or ECV.
No. Unless they ban the use scooters, just changing where you can get them doesn’t cause an ADA issue.