callieriggs said:
Florida law
Fla. Stat. Ann. § 383.015
1993 Fl. ALS 4; 1993 Fla. Laws ch. 4; 1993 Fla. HB 231
The breast feeding of a baby is an important and basic act of nurture which must be encouraged in the interests of maternal and child health and family values. A mother may breast feed her baby in any location, public or private, where the mother is otherwise authorized to be, irrespective of whether or not the nipple of the mother's breast is covered during or incidental to the breast feeding.
You didn't need to quote that. I didn't disagree.
The fact is, no one is "authorized" on those attractions to have food or drink - ANYONE. You are allowed on a WDW attraction as long as you follow the rules; if you break the rules, they revoke your authorization and then you would be in an private space you are not authorized to be, negating the "right" the law gives you.
You have no "right" to be at Disney World, you buy a ticket which is revokable at any time, the condition of which is, you follow the rules. If you break the rules, you would not be authorized to be there and the law would not apply. It just stands to good sense that if food and drink isn't allowed, the container should not matter.
Sorry, I understand your point, but when people say ANYWHERE and RIGHTS in capital letters, I think the technicalities need to be recognized as well. I stand by the fact that I believe it is against the rules at WDW to nurse on a moving vehicle ride. That's independent of my opinion that it is of bad taste (lots of things are legal but of poor taste...), but just a following of the law to the letter. I'm sure it will never come to it, but it could definately be interpreted that way.
As to riding the rides at all with a newborn, I guess if you choose to risk it, it's your business. My prayers are with you for your safety if you do. Taking a newborn on a theme park ride like "Peter Pan" may sound like an innocent fun time, it's still a theme park attraction and a risk. With that one in particular, if an evac happens (once a week or more), they have to call the fire dept. to get people down by ladders. Is a 2 minute ride worth the possibility of having to hand your baby over to a fireman to be taken down a 12-foot tall ladder, and have to navigate through the corridors of a mechanical operation like a ride?
NED