Not sure why but this Duncan Dickson's quote in the article seems ridiculous to me:
"In the same article, former Disney executive Duncan Dickson said: “The entire property is interconnected via canals so it is difficult to keep them out of the lakes. Gators are on all of the golf courses. The team attempts to relocate the gators to the uninhabited natural areas as best they can, but the gators don’t understand the boundaries.”
He makes it sound like its a cultural miscommunication between humans and alligators.
His point is they can relocate gators all day long, but they come back. This is why wildlife authorities in Florida euthanize any gator they find over 4', as they have a habit of returning to the location they were removed from.
His second point is they can't keep gator's from coming in. It's a huge interconnected waterway. In the middle of swampland in Florida.
When things like this happen people want a failsafe solution to prevent it from happening again and they want to know why things weren't done to prevent it in the first place. Neither of these are realistic. There can be no failsafe because gators exist, they won't stop existing, and they won't stop showing up in/near bodies of water in central Florida. So the best thing that can be done is mitigate the danger through a combination of education\warnings (signage) and gator deterrents. And as far as what could have been done prior to this, well, Captain Hindsight loves to show up to these parties but the reality of it is a guest hasn't been attacked by an alligator on Disney property for 30 years (1986). In the past 30 years of operation, tens of millions of guests have stayed in those resorts and walked in the water on those beaches. Countless others have gone swimming in that water despite the warnings.
The event is a tragedy. My wife called me bawling yesterday as that is when she first heard about it. We were there with our family (our youngest being a 2 year old boy) just a few months ago. It is very easy for her to put herself in that situation, as I'm sure it is for many of you.
As usual however, there is a ridiculous over reaction being stirred up over this. Officials are "searching for a gator with attack marks", and in the process they are killing any other alligator they capture. The gator wasn't a serial killer. It's not mad with a taste for human blood. It was doing what any gator does, looking for something to eat. Killing every gator in that lake won't change what happened, nor will it prevent new gators from moving in and taking their place.
Even if I take a moment and try to put myself in the place of a father who lost his son in that terrible manner, I don't see how killing any gator (even the one who got him) would make me feel better. Might as well blame the alligator for being alive in the first place at that point or blame a bird for having feathers and flying.
Can we, as humans, not be supportive of the family and yet realistic about the situation at the same time?