Here's the Orlando Sentinel article:
Passengers were evacuated from the monorail at Walt Disney World Resort Sunday evening after a power failure, according to a Disney spokeswoman.
No one was injured in the incident, but about 120 people were evacuated from the six-car train, which stopped on the Epcot line near theWilderness Lodge, officials said. Some guests climbed out of the roof of one car and back down through another to use stairs attached to a monorail beam, said Bo Jones, assistant chief with Reedy Creek Emergency Services. Others were lowered on a lift with railings that was attached to a Reedy Creek fire truck.
The monorail shut down about 6:30 p.m. during stormy weather, but Disney employees were able to restart several other trains that were on the system and return them to stations, said Disney spokeswoman Andrea Finger. The train that stopped and was evacuatedwas between the Ticket and Transportation Center and theWilderness Lodge, Jones said.
Resort visitors posted pictures of a ladder truck from Reedy Creek Emergency Services extended up to the monorail not far from Disney'sWilderness Lodge. Renee Wells of Valdosta, Ga., was on the monorail trainwith her family and took several photos before the evacuation, according to a cousin, who posted them on Twitter. The cousin, Kristin Barry of Charlotte, N.C., said that some passengers sang "Let It Go" from Frozen to pass the time. Wells and her family returned to the parks after the incident and were able to rebook their Crystal Palace reservations, Barry said.
One of Wells' photos showed that guests drew Mickey ears in condensation on monorail windows after the power went out.
Reedy Creek firefighters began evacuating passengers about 7 p.m., after several power restart attempts failed, Jones said. All of the passengers were evacuated by 8 p.m., he said. This was the first time in at least three or four years that a monorail had to be evacuated, Jones said. None of the passengers experienced any medical complications.
Finger said that guests were transported to their final destinations after reaching the ground. Disney officials will be working to move the train tonight, Finger said.