something that has bugged me since the rollout of DAS that is petty I admit but still rubs me the wrong way esp when people piss and moan about not being able to do as much as 'normal' people and think they should be allowed to cram twice as much in .
you already ARE.
Family A and Family B wants to do 7DMT. Family A used their FP+ selection on something else so they get in the SB line which is at 60 minutes. for the next hour they will be standing around trying to get "its a Small World' out of their head.
Family B with a DAS walks up at the same time and gets a Return time for 50 minutes away. for the next 45 minutes THEY can : ride another ride, go shopping, grab a bite to eat, go pee, get a picture with Eeyore. any one of those things.
in the same time frame, Family B has accomplished more than Family A.
I also have serious issues with the notion of "NEEDING" accelerated access. everyone WANTS it..no one NEEDS it.. not even disabled( mentally or physical) it is up tot each family/group/individual to put a limit on what they will deal with.. for instance I will not get into any SB line that has a listed wait time of more than 30 minutes( Except Soaring.. that one I go 45 cuz I am besotted with that ride)
This really gets to me too. (and my point does tie into the lawsuit) My kids don't have a disability that we would request a DAS for but we have complications that take time and make us miss scheduled items constantly. It's not just part of a disability, it's part of being human. People need rest, people get sick, people have a rough day. People can't walk and need a stroller, other people have to leave because they pinch a nerve carrying said person.
We have had counter service meals take 90 minutes waiting for an allergy order. Disney didn't give us something extra, even though we missed rides due to a disability. It was even directly the result of Disney's employee training issues. I've similarly spent hours standing outside a park entrance with DD as she had a meltdown and didn't get that the park she was promised was right there 20 yards away. It sucks, but isn't really Disney's fault and is not really their job to give us a privilege to fix it. Nothing they could do can make it right, it's just the way things happen. I have to know that we are going to encounter these things and I have to plan for them the best I can.
So then to consider the flip-side, Even if we missed half a park day, we could get so much more done if we could take care of physical needs while "waiting in line." It's not just an issue of waiting 90 minutes for splash in line or out of line- it's not ride at all vs. ride splash after spending 90 minutes getting a snack, riding 3 rides and taking 2 potty breaks. Every person has a different stamina limit, there is no way to make the system equal without surveying every person in the park for the day and working it like a golf penalty. We might have the same time limit as a family with an individual with a DAS card for a cognitive disability, so why exactly should that person get access to free time while we have to stand in a queue staring at some lady's butt?
This makes the underlying goal of the lawsuit little more than nonsense to me. Generally the reasons cited why people need accommodation are things that most groups have to deal with on some scale. I understand that all disabilities are difficult and I do get that there are people who need an adjustment to Disney's standard procedure that are not met by the form of the physical line. My response to the lawsuit is that short of some way they can provide proof that the "normal" 4 year old can wait in a 30 minute line without distress, or show that that "normal" child can spend 8 hours in the park without ever loosing place in line for a potty break, needing a nap or crying because it's all too much, I don't think they are going to win the idea that they are legally entitled to require Disney to give them an experience far above and beyond what the non-disabled guest could expect. If the non-disabled guest can't expect to ride anything they want at any time, then it is not equal for the disabled guest to be able to expect this. That is an advantage over other guests and has so many factors involved there is no fair or equal way to administer such a program. If you get an advantage for a potential bad day, should you get a penalty if the day goes well? What about the family that didn't get the advantage and faced the difficulty you anticipated? There's no way to make it fair.