they used to have that on the GAC - a stamp that gave you front row seating..
i had that for my mom (who is almost completely blind - what's called 'legally blind'....)..she still can't see much even from the first row, but it's much better than from anywhere else...
i don't know if they even reserve places anymore for people like that..
they used to have reserved areas for people with visual problems...(like the front row of flights with wonder, front rows of fantasmic, etc)
they still do have reserved seating the same as before. You need to ask a CM if you need help getting to it. That works similar go seating in places outside of WDW, like movie theaters.
Even though some people found the GAC stamp helpful, many people with vision problems found it did not help them and it was easier to just not use it.
Some just went to the front row without getting a CM involved at all.
Some found having the stamp actually meant the CM put them into a place that didn't meet their needs, so just didn't use it.
For example, the stamp was for "front row", but some people need more specific - front row, left side of theater - or wanted to be near the front, not necessarily in the front row because being in the front row put the stage above them in some shows (and was hard on the neck).
Then, there were people who had more than one stamp; we saw people multiple times who had a "front row" stamp and a "may use wheelchair access" stamp.
In many cases, those are competing stamps because using the wheelchair access for a show would put you into the very back row.
People didn't understand that and on more than one occassion, we saw people arguing with the CM that their "rights were being violated" because they were not being allowed to use the wheelchair access, when the CM was trying to put them in the area that would meet their vision needs.
It's maybe easiest to think of DAS as a single thing, set up to meet specific type of needs that can't be met just by asking a CM. It is set up to meet needs/disabilities related to waiting in line only. That is all it handles.
Other needs are handled in other ways - things like ramps and signs for access without stairs, seating in the front row marked reserved and handicapped, wheelchair spots, accessible ride cars.
Guests can ask a CM for assistance with all of those things.
For example, if the spots they need are already filled, the CM can make room or ask others to move. That is just like in a movie theater outside WDW - people with vision disabilities don't get a card that says they need front row seating.
One of the other issues with GAC was that because some people had a GAC with a stamp for front row setting, many CMs expected anyone asking for it to have a GAC with that stamp.
Requiring a GAC or any 'proof' would put them out of compliance with the ADA, which says people with disabilities can't be forced to show proof of disability and need to be handled in the Mainstream as much as possible (same way as other people).
This is a different way of looking at things for many people, but when you think about it, the 'waiting in line' needs are really the main ones that can't be met in the Mainstream.