- Joined
- Aug 23, 1999
- Messages
- 36,352
You were told WRONG. The only people who get cards that let them move to the front of the line are children on Make A Wish trip and similar.gssmks said:I was told that if I had a form completed by her doctor, we could move to the front of the lines. I did not do this.
The card that WDW has is called a Guest Assistance Card (GAC, so we don't have to type so much).
The GAC says right on it that it is not meant to shorten or eleminate waits in line. It is a tool for CMs to tell what sorts of accomidations people need in order to experience attractions. The GAC is based on the needs the person has and allows things (if they are available) that will meet those needs. Some possible things might be a place to wait out of the sun, bringing a stroller into lines and having it treated like a wheelchair. Not all GACs say the same things; the CM stamps the appropriate messages to meet the needs of the person onto the card when it is issued.
If you want more information about GACs, check out the disABILITIES FAQs thread near the top of the disABILITIES Board.
Very good outlook.gssmks said:First, she will be living with this condition her entire life. She needs to learn to pace herself so that she does not exhaust herself. She needs to learn what her limits are because she will not always be someplace where she will get to skip to the front of the line. Second, it would not be fair to all those people who have waited so long if we just walked right up and got on with no wait at all. I did rent her a stroller although she was much too big for it so that we were guaranteed that she would have a sit when she needed one. Also, she sat in it during parades and the castle stage show, etc. On our next trip, I will probably have to rent her a wheelchair, because there is no way she can use a stroller now. However, I can assure you that we will not use the chair to get out of standing with the rest of you.
If you do rent a wheelchair next time you go to WDW, you will find that most of the lines/attractions are wheelchair accessible and you will be waiting in the same lines as everyone else. In fact, for someone like my DD who can't get out of her wheelchair without us lifting her out, we may wait even longer sometimes for the attractions that have a wheelchair accessible car.