Orlando Sentinel

Disney World resort laying off 1,100 workers

Swan and Dolphin move comes after summer MLS stay

- By Gabrielle Russon

With the profession­al athletes gone, Walt Disney World Swan and Dolphin Resort is laying off about 1,100 employees because of low occupancy and canceled events in another hit to the tourism industry because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The layoffs are coming after Major League Soccer players and staff stayed there this summer.

The Marriott hotel between Epcot and Hollywood Studios called the economic impact “historic, swift and devastatin­g” as it alerted the state as a requiremen­t under federal law for mass layoffs.

The entire Swan portion of the hotel had been home to MLS teams who were staying there in the “bubble” in July and August as they played in a tournament at ESPN Wide World of Sports.

NBA players also became guests at other Disney hotels when the league restarted play in Orlando amid the pandemic.

Even though all Orlando’s theme parks are open, September has been a brutal time for the industry as thousands of employees have recently been let go or placed on indefinite furloughs.

New notices filed this week showed 5,400 Universal employees are furloughed and1,900 employees at SeaWorld’s Orlando properties are now permanentl­y laid off after being

furloughed since March.

The Swan and Dolphin warned the economic impact will carry over into 2021.

The 1,136 positions are in multiple department­s of the hotel, including 256 banquet servers, 41 cooks, 67 housekeepe­rs and 88 loss prevention officers. The notice said the layoffs are permanent and effective Nov. 13.

Included are about 135 union employees represente­d by Teamsters Local 385 who work primarily as servers, housekeepe­rs and laundry attendants. Those employees may be among the first to return if the hotel reverses course and brings back jobs.

At 11%, metro Orlando had the highest regional unemployme­nt rate in the state in August, according to a report released by the state Friday.

Orange County’s jobless rate stood at 11.6% and Osceola was 15.1%, the worst county rates in the state for the month.

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