Los Angeles Times

Disneyland settles Dream Key suit

Its parent company was accused in 2021 of deceiving people who bought the top-tier annual passes.

- By Keri Blakinger

Disneyland has reached a class-wide settlement in a federal lawsuit accusing the entertainm­ent giant of deceiving people who bought top-tier yearly passes thinking they would get unlimited access to the park only to find that they were blocked in favor of daily-pass purchasers.

Notice of the agreement between Disney and self-described Disney enthusiast Jenale Nielsen — who brought the suit on behalf of all Dream Key passholder­s — was filed in U.S. District Court last week, but the parties have until the end of next month to hash out the details of a preliminar­y agreement and formally ask the court to approve it.

“We are satisfied that this matter has been resolved,” Disney officials said in a statement emailed to The Times late Monday. They did not provide answers to questions about the proposed terms or the dollar amount of the settlement. Attorneys for Nielsen did not respond to a request for comment.

The lawsuit was filed in 2021, when Nielsen bought a $1,399 Dream Key pass — the top-tier annual pass — a month after the company launched its new Magic Key pass program. At the time, Nielsen alleged, Disney’s advertisin­g

said the Dream Key had “no block-out dates,” so she believed she could visit the Anaheim theme park any day she wanted.

But the pass required reservatio­ns, and not long after making her purchase that September, Nielsen discovered she couldn’t make a reservatio­n for most of the days in November — including every single weekend all month, according to the suit.

“As a frequent Disneyland visitor, Ms. Nielsen thought it unlikely that all tickets and/or reservatio­ns for both Disneyland and California Adventure had already been sold out for seventeen of the 30 calendar days in November 2021,” the suit says.

When she checked the Disneyland reservatio­n website, Nielsen saw the park was open for reservatio­ns for single- and multiple-day ticket buyers, who are charged up to $224 per visit, the suit alleges.

“The problem was not that Disney had reached its capacity and therefore could

not provide reservatio­ns to its Dream Key pass holders,” the suit says. “The problem was that Disney had decided to block out reservatio­ns so that they were only available to new purchases and were not available to Dream Key pass holders.”

The suit also said the company appeared to be limiting the number of Dream Key passholder­s who could visit per day to maximize single-day-pass sales, a practice that “directly contradict­s Disney’s advertised promise” that Dream Key holders wouldn’t be subject to block-out dates.

Though the website through which the Dream Keys were sold said that reservatio­ns were “subject to availabili­ty and are not guaranteed for any specific dates or park,” Nielsen said buyers reasonably expected that Disney would not “artificial­ly limit” the number of reservatio­ns available.

The lawsuit accused the media giant of breach of contract, negligent misreprese­ntation and unfair competitio­n, and asked that the company be made to pay back passholder­s and stop its “deceptive business practices.”

The company denied those allegation­s, saying its messaging was laid out on the website.

“We have been clear about the terms of the Magic Key product, and we know that many of our guests are enjoying the experience­s these passes provide,” a Disney spokeswoma­n said after the suit was filed.

The case initially started in Orange County Superior Court but was moved to federal court because it was a potential class-action case involving $5 million or more. As of this month, the two sides were still battling over whether it would be a class action. The settlement notice filed Thursday says the agreement will resolve the case “in its entirety on a class-wide basis.”

Disney started selling the pricey passes in question in 2021, after ending the decades-old annual pass program during the pandemic.

Under the previous annual pass program, reservatio­ns weren’t needed, and annualpass­holders could visit as often as they wanted, as long as it wasn’t on a day marked as blocked. But when Disneyland reopened in April 2021 after a 15-month COVID-19 shutdown, the park began requiring reservatio­ns — even for new annual passholder­s.

Disney does not release attendance figures, but the number of people who hold annual passes has long been believed to hover around 1 million.

 ?? Jae C. Hong Associated Press ?? DISNEY did not answer questions about the proposed terms or the dollar amount of the settlement.
Jae C. Hong Associated Press DISNEY did not answer questions about the proposed terms or the dollar amount of the settlement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States