OurBigTrip
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- May 27, 2013
- Messages
- 3,462
Not a bad discussion. Really all of the responses are well thought out.
I would clarify a few things about my proposal, though.
bedogged asked:
That's not what I meant at all. What I meant is that in addition to the current accessibility programs Disney provides, guests with severe mobility or accessibility constraints can participate in a program that gives them three front of the line or near front of the line experiences per day. I'm not proposing limitting access at all nor making the program mandatory. Simply another option for people who still end up shut out under the current system.
To make this happen, the some of the rest of us wait in some lines a little longer for a couple hours a day a couple days out of a vacation.
I'm not asking Disney to review medical records. I'm suggesting only that the need for this be verified on a legally binding document, a sworn affadavit, like that which is needed to secure a handicap parking permit. There is fraud in the handicap parking permit game but mostly it is secondary (between the person issued the permit and the person using it), doctors really do not want to legally swear that a well person needs a handicap space.
I like Rusty Scuppers response. No flame proof suit needed here I hope. I held a similar view for some time myself. I had a funny sort of awakening on a trip to Korea. In Korea the people basically said that blind people should have a fair shot at working like anyone else, but there's not much a blind person can do. So they set aside a few occupations like massage therapist and declared that only blind people may legally work this job. It's so extreme of a solution, just tell everyone else who might want to do this job that they are not handicapped enough to get the job. But the program is (or was anyway) very popular. People told me, "The alternative is that some people who can work don't get to."
So I ask, if you're in line and a cancer kid behind you is fading fast. She's gonna have to go home in 3 or 4 minutes max. You're next in line to see Snow White and Rapunzel, her favorite princesses as well as your kids' favorite. Do you offer to switch place with her? Or do you enjoy getting your at your deserved time knowing that cancer girl will be going home without any such fun?
To anyone who cares, answer this please, yes or no; Are there some people with disabilities or illness that simply cannot fully enjoy WDW without special access? Special access in this case meaning above and beyond reasonable accomodation.
If the answer is yes, then what would a system designed to help those special cases look like? I agree it won't look much like what I proposed, but I covered three bases, little imposition on the rest of the guests, guarantee a reasonable level of WDW fun to someone who would otherwise not have it, and be accountable to providing this only on an as needed basis.
Maybe someone has different bases they would rather see covered, that's what I'm looking for.
The problem I see with your example is that it wouldn't be one child. One child would be no issue.
Hundreds of children would be an issue, which is what the original proposal seems to be. And no, I don't think it's reasonable to ask (as your proposal does) non-disabled families to wait additional hours for two or three days out of their vacations.