I have not read the whole thread, but I have worked for the mouse "off property" at the Vero Beach resort making a pittance to clean toilets and the lobby.
The job is not rocket science, it did not pay much and I am not of any disillusion that sporting a smile requires additional compensation. You either have a work ethic or you don't and there are people in all sorts of jobs world wide that should not work in customer service. They'd be unhappy if they made twice as much.
I have relatives that currently or in the past work for the mouse in the past. One is salaried, one was salaried, one was hourly with a sad resentment towards guests.
I also have a friend who currently works for the mouse. She isn't wealthy--far from it, she is hourly--but she does it b/c it is fun (and free that free entry perk).
It would be lovely if folks were paid more. But--to say they deserve more as an entity, I have a problem with that.
There is a supply and demand, they will offer more when they are short on supply of cast members and they will offer less when there is a line a mile long.
Then toss in that--what exactly are folks doing? For most folks--they aren't doing much that requires a $20 hour salary (a rough guestimate of a "living" wage). The tasks involved just don't command that wage.
I don't recall my wage, but it wasn't very high. It was an opportunity to leave a crap job that paid more to work for the mouse. When I got there, I was treated poorly by the housekeeping staff (but beautifully by the office/lobby/kitchen staff and HR--go figure!) That drove me to leave at the first opportunity.
I have a hard time with folks insisting that customer service folks should make more just because they deal with people. I just don't get it. There just isn't a huge skill set required and being nice (IMHO) isn't something someone should be paid to be. If they aren't nice at $2 an hour, they aren't going to be nice at $20 or $50 an hour.
I am not certain of the resolution, but if one were to really investigate the compensation schedule across corporations, Disney is not unique in what they are doing.
Now, I was not on property. I was in my own little Vero Beach world. One friend that used to work there, but transitioned on property when they shut down sales at Vero said that it was a whole different world once you got to the world.
But my bottom line opinion--compensation should be commensurate with skill set required to do a job. I cleaned toilets. I had a hard time then and now with the notion that I should be getting paid a lot to do that task.