NJOYURLIFE
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2005
- Messages
- 1,946
My son and about 8 friends have been planning a Disney trip to celebrate high school gradutation for a while now. Well, I will be doing the planning. The boys decided that instead of the unofficial "senior trip" to the beach where everyone gets drunk, they would rather do Disney. For most it will be the first time.
I am trying to gather prices and as we all know ticket prices are one of the most expensive parts of a Disney trip.
I understand that you need to be part of a legitimate group to participate in the YES program. In addition to going to school together, these boys are on the same summer baseball league (not school related) and almost all of them are junior members of a local fire volunteer fire dept. So I am debating on if we should open the trip up to all of the members of any one of these groups and if so, which group would Disney most likely approve. Also, what would the organization's liability be if they approved something like this.
To me, utililizing the fact that they are all seniors from the same school would require the school board, plus require us to open it up to a lot more students. If we include the baseball league or fire dept, then we would only need to incude a few more additional kids, who may or may not chose to go. If they chose to go, we'd hit 10 easily. If they don't go, there are 8 boys and 2 sets (possibly 3) of families planning to go on the trip, so with siblings we'd be over 10. Thankfully, they are all close in age.
Before I open it up to either group, I am wondering if it would be worth it. What type of liability would I be exposing the group to? What would I have to ask the group to provide? There will be 5 boys who will be traveling without their parents, but they may or may not have turned 18 yet (don't know all their birthdays) by the time of the trip.
If I can make the trip affordable enough, maybe a few more kids can join us. If their families don't chose to go, at the minimum we would have 4 adults dealing with about 12 16-18 year old boys.
Any thoughts or suggestions? We are not trying to break or circumvent any rules. This may not be the best route to go. But if there is a program that these boys can utilize legitimitely, I owe it to them to research it.
When I spoke with Disney, they were very vague.
I am trying to gather prices and as we all know ticket prices are one of the most expensive parts of a Disney trip.
I understand that you need to be part of a legitimate group to participate in the YES program. In addition to going to school together, these boys are on the same summer baseball league (not school related) and almost all of them are junior members of a local fire volunteer fire dept. So I am debating on if we should open the trip up to all of the members of any one of these groups and if so, which group would Disney most likely approve. Also, what would the organization's liability be if they approved something like this.
To me, utililizing the fact that they are all seniors from the same school would require the school board, plus require us to open it up to a lot more students. If we include the baseball league or fire dept, then we would only need to incude a few more additional kids, who may or may not chose to go. If they chose to go, we'd hit 10 easily. If they don't go, there are 8 boys and 2 sets (possibly 3) of families planning to go on the trip, so with siblings we'd be over 10. Thankfully, they are all close in age.
Before I open it up to either group, I am wondering if it would be worth it. What type of liability would I be exposing the group to? What would I have to ask the group to provide? There will be 5 boys who will be traveling without their parents, but they may or may not have turned 18 yet (don't know all their birthdays) by the time of the trip.
If I can make the trip affordable enough, maybe a few more kids can join us. If their families don't chose to go, at the minimum we would have 4 adults dealing with about 12 16-18 year old boys.
Any thoughts or suggestions? We are not trying to break or circumvent any rules. This may not be the best route to go. But if there is a program that these boys can utilize legitimitely, I owe it to them to research it.
When I spoke with Disney, they were very vague.