Isthisnormalatdisney
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2025
- Messages
- 107
Hello,
I work for a Florida based attorney who is looking into the Disney Skyliner policy as applied to people who use the red tag (stroller=wheelchair) with groups of 7-10 people.
Currently, Disney’s policy is if you have a red tag the capacity of the gondola is limited to 6 people, but if that same exact stroller does not contain the red tag the capacity is 10 people.
This is concerning because Disney is arbitrarily limiting the skyliner capacity for families with a red tag in violation of the ADA and forcing the families/groups to separate, just because of a one ounce tag placed on a stroller. When it comes to certain mobility devices we do not claim Disney can’t limit capacity of the skyliner, but it must do so in a reasonable and rationale manner.
If this policy has negatively impacted anyone we highly recommend filing with the Florida Commission on Human Resources. If enough people speak up and engage Disney they should be able to recognize that their policy is discriminatory.
Another concerning area we are looking into is the boat that goes between the contemporary, wilderness lodge, and fort wilderness not being ADA compliant in any way shape or form.
Any questions let us know and hopefully this can result in Disney re-evaluation its policies so families can remain together and not subject to arbitrary policies.
I work for a Florida based attorney who is looking into the Disney Skyliner policy as applied to people who use the red tag (stroller=wheelchair) with groups of 7-10 people.
Currently, Disney’s policy is if you have a red tag the capacity of the gondola is limited to 6 people, but if that same exact stroller does not contain the red tag the capacity is 10 people.
This is concerning because Disney is arbitrarily limiting the skyliner capacity for families with a red tag in violation of the ADA and forcing the families/groups to separate, just because of a one ounce tag placed on a stroller. When it comes to certain mobility devices we do not claim Disney can’t limit capacity of the skyliner, but it must do so in a reasonable and rationale manner.
If this policy has negatively impacted anyone we highly recommend filing with the Florida Commission on Human Resources. If enough people speak up and engage Disney they should be able to recognize that their policy is discriminatory.
Another concerning area we are looking into is the boat that goes between the contemporary, wilderness lodge, and fort wilderness not being ADA compliant in any way shape or form.
Any questions let us know and hopefully this can result in Disney re-evaluation its policies so families can remain together and not subject to arbitrary policies.