Arab Times

Disney World workers take aim at Florida’s jobless system

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Some of the 43,000 workers whose unions reached a deal with Walt Disney World over the weekend on temporary furloughs that allow them to keep their benefits aren’t going quietly. They staged stay-athome protests Monday aimed not at their employer but Florida’s beleaguere­d unemployme­nt system.

On a sidewalk outside her apartment building in suburban Orlando, Lacey Gamble, a server at Epcot, and her 5-year-old daughter, used colored chalk to draw pictures of Lumiere from the Disney movie “Beauty and the Beast” and Sulley from “”Monsters Inc.” They also scrawled in green and yellow chalk “SOS. #WorkersCan’tWait.”

Other Disney workers across metro Orlando were doing the same, hanging signs in windows at home and scrawling messages on mailboxes aimed at sending a message to state officials: the unemployme­nt system needs to be fixed.

“This system has been failing for years. Somebody needs to speak up,” Gamble said. “We need to feed our children. We need to pay our bills.”

Disney World has been paying its workforce - which numbers 77,000 employees - since it closed its doors in mid-March because of the spreading new coronaviru­s, but it plans to start indefinite furloughs next week. That’s when tens of thousands of Disney workers will try signing up for Florida unemployme­nt benefits.

Many of the state’s hundreds of thousands of newly jobless have reported problems with filing applicatio­ns or getting help from hotlines. They’ve had their online applicatio­ns disappear in front of their eyes when the computer refreshes or they’ve gotten bumped out of the system while filling out the forms, forcing them to start over.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said last week that he’s added 2,000 state workers to try to sort through the growing numbers of unemployme­nt claims. The Department of Economic Opportunit­y also has increased its computer system’s capacity so that it can handle the approximat­ely 120,000 simultaneo­us website users it has been seeing recently - about double the peak usage in recent weeks. Officials said the agency received 3.8 million calls last week, 50% more than all of last year.

The maximum compensati­on unemployed applicants can receive is $275 a week, among the lowest in the nation.

“The system is broken,” said Jeremy Haicken, president of Unite Here Local 737, one of the six unions for Disney World workers that make up the Service Trades Council. “We’re not going to stop until Gov. DeSantis fixes this unemployme­nt system.” (AP)

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