poeticdiabetic
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2007
- Messages
- 745
Heat stroke happens all the time. I'm amazed that this is news.
Exactly . . . . . .Heat stroke happens every day in the summer at all of the Orlando, FL parks. Not sure why this was newsworthy. I can almost say with certainty that someone probably collapsed at Disney and Seaworld on the same day. It's certainly not uncommon at all.
However did Universal have someone pushing a cart and selling water down the massive line? That would have been nice!
This is what confuses me most, as quoted in another similar article; "Smith said she did file a formal complaint with Universal officials, but wants to stress that the actual care she received was excellent." And in the article I posted; "upset that Universal doesn't seem to care about guest safety." WHAT??![]()
A couple of years ago my wife and I were walking towards The Simpsons ride when she tripped over a piece of pavement that was sticking up. She fell pretty hard, banged her knees and elbow bloody.
We went to the ride and told the attendant, who notified first aid. The first aid guy showed up very fast so I went back and took pictures of the pavement where she fell while first aid attended to her. After she was bandaged up we went to Guest Relations where I showed them the pictures and my wife's injuries. They offered us a couple of express passes or something like that.
Evey time we go back we look at that section of sidewalk, which is exactly the same as it was when she fell. So we can also make the same two statements. The actual care they gave her was excellent and they don't seem to care about guest safety. They would rather hand out some express passes every now and then than fix the sidewalk.
Hope that clears up some of your confusion. We still go there, obviously, but we can see the truth in her statements. I don't think she has as good of an argument as my wife does tho.
I think this is comparing apples to wrenches ~ your wife tripped on pavement that is directly related to the upkeep of the park - US/IOA responsibility. Woman suffered heat stroke/exhaustion due to unusually hot/humid weather - not the responsibility of US/IOA.
Sack
While I'm surprised that it is news, I do think that if the lines are consistently running to several hours in length, USIOA should be setting up quite a few umbrellas along the line path; every 20 feet or so, and probably portable mister fans, too. Keeping thousands of people out in the sun for hours with no shade while waiting in an attraction line isn't good guest relations on their parts.
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Ok, I was there in that seven hour line on opening day. Universal was totally unprepared for the number of people that showed up.
Stayed at HRH, got in line for onsite guests about 7:30 am that morning. Huge line of GP down in past the HR Cafe already. We had no idea that it would take 7 hours to get to WWHP and no one was advising guests of that either. There were many, many, unhappy campers in line. As we moved through the park we stood for quite some time in an area by some docks at the end of Toon Lagoon, where the line snaked back and forth closely together. There were several large fans but they weren't on. There was ONE vendor selling powerade only for cash only - so if you didn't have cash, you were out of luck. Another person in line called Universal on the phone asking they turn on the fans and about 15 minutes later a maintenance looking guy showed up and was able to get about 2-3 of the several fans running - we are thinking it's an area that isn't used much and apparently the rest were out of order. The reason the guest called on the phone is because there were zero Universal employees in sight and that went on for the first about half of our wait. We had gotten to the river barge ride area when I saw the first Universal employee watching the line. I pointed out to him where I was waiting as I had to leave the line to take my daughter to the bathroom. I started looking for drinks and food as it was now about 10:30 am (3 hours in line) and there was absolutely nothing open in the area except one more powerade tub for cash only. Asked the Universal employee and they were clueless, telling me to check places I'd already checked and didn't open until 11 am. Nothing else opened until 11 am, it was wicked hot and the powerades we'd bought with cash were long gone. Left my DH and son in line and got drinks and sandwiches at the Blondies place, stood in a line outside for it to open at 11 am, which took forever, things were not moving quickly and I was about 4th in line, a huge line formed behind us as soon as others realized it was open. Everywhere you tried to get something was a huge line. I can well believe someone passing out. Never saw anyone giving out anything from Universal. It had gotten to the point where we knew our line neighbors, and everyone was cool with letting people take turns getting out of line, going into shops to cool off, I took the lunch and drinks back to the line for my family.
It was horribly, horribly unorganized and there were many complaints. The only real crowd control from Universal was as we approached the Jurassic Park bridge over to The Lost Continent where an employee was announcing that he wanted to know about any line jumpers and they would be removed. Crossed my mind that Target does a better job with Black Friday. Should have had those kind of employees all along the line as there were cutters. After that "checkpoint" only those that passed his test were allowed across and 6 hours after we started we got into the FJ line.
Please don't blame the guest - you had to have been there to really understand the problems and "walk in her shoes". Nothing given out free - I was in that line for seven hours AND I NEVER SAW THAT!; no place to buy drinks but the cash only powerade until 11 am, huge lines for everything that opened at 11 am and it was inhumanely hot out there. We had drinks with us, had sunscreened up etc but none of us expected the line to be that long and apparently Universal didn't either. As someone in line said "they advertise this like crazy and then expect people won't show up?"
Universal learned some lessons from the first day - next day I saw many vendors open about 7:30 am when I went back for the onsite guest preview. By Saturday night at about 8:30 pm we walked right into WWHP but the lines for everything except the Dragon Challenge and Flight of the Hippogriff were still insanely long. FJ was 120 minutes that night.
My first hand review . . . I was surprised that I didn't see more people with heat related problems. I did reach into the tubs and took ice to cool off with - and they didn't stop me LOL - if that counts as handing out ice.
BTW, when we left IOA on Friday it was late afternoon and there was a line up to the beginning of Seuss Landing so longer than we started in Marvel Island that morning. Park closed at 10 pm and if it went as slow as ours there was no way those guests were going to get in before park closing. If I can figure that out, so could Universal and yet there those people stood. Sure enough next day news is talking about guests that waited 10 hours and still didn't get in . . . it's not rocket science! Universal could have cut the line off somewhere and let people know they weren't going to make it, before they invested all that time.
About 5 hours in, we were in the Jurassic Park area by then, a Universal vendor came by with one of those soft side cooler things selling bottles of water for I believe it was $2.75, not giving away. Line mate in front of us said yay, and handed the guy a $10 bill. Vendor guy says I'm really sorry but I can't change that. Now that's when I say "Seriously?" Who was in charge of this stuff?
Not blaming Universal directly for the heat stroke thing, what I'm saying is that they were entirely unprepared for the response to the opening day of Harry Potter and handled it very poorly - and for that I can see why someone could suffer heat stroke. They certainly didn't make it easy on us. Luckily for my line mate, others in line were able to make change for him.
Again, no one knew how long we would wait. The first 3 hours we thought we'd get moving after the opening ceremony was over. There was never info given - and after you've invested that first 3 hours (not to mention all the $$$ to be there) it's a little harder to walk away. It wasn't announced until that evening that there would be a preview the next morning so we didn't know we'd get in the next day either. BTW the preview on Saturday for hotel guests was announced as 6am-9am. I got there I think about 6:30 am and stood in another line until I think it was about 7:15, when they let us in. Asked an employee when they'd let us in and she said "when they are ready". Seriously? Preview hours should have been "when they are ready".
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