Actually I believe that four of the suites have enough accomodation to be considered HA. Because they were built prior to the ADA, and they offer some level of accomodation, they actually are within the law that says "reasonable accomodation."
DH and I sometimes stay at a B&B whose owners were taken to court because they only have one out of 16 rooms that's accessible, and it's one of the more expensive rooms. Well, it's a 100+ year old facility with three stories and no elevator in the main building, and all the guest rooms are on the 2nd and 3rd floor. So they converted one of the carriage house suites--all single floor and located behind the main house. Somebody was demanding that they either get to rent that suite repleat with fireplace and walk-in jacuzzi at the same price as the lowest price room, or install an elevator. The owners fought it and won. They made a reasonable accomodation by coverting the suite closest to the main house and do offer it for less than the other suites, although the others have a river view and that one doesn't--they chose to convert that one to keep it as close as possible so mobility impaired people would have a shorter distance in bad weather. I guess sometimes you can't win even when you do the right thing.
The HA rooms at the GF are far from the worst views. In fact at least two of them are two of the best locations at the resort--one is dead on castle view on the second or third floor of Conch Key, the other is just off the lounge on the third floor of the RPC overlooking the quiet pool. (Over half of those rooms overlook the quiet pool.)
Anne
When I called the GF, they told me there were no handicapped rooms overlooking the Magic Kingdom. Gah. That just makes me even more upset; once again we were lied to. They need to create a fact sheet for handicapped rooms and hand them out to everybody so you don't get two different answers for the same question.