The Union Democrat

Disneyland and other California theme parks reopening in just weeks, scramble to get ready

- By HUGO MARTÍN

LOS ANGELES – The assassinat­ion of President Kennedy led Disneyland to close for a day in 1963. Universal Studios Hollywood closed just long enough to complete safety inspection­s after the Northridge earthquake struck in 1994.

The COVID-19 pandemic has shut California’s largest theme parks for more than a year, creating an unpreceden­ted challenge for the operators of Disneyland, Universal Studios Hollywood and other parks who are now scrambling to prepare to reopen under more relaxed safety protocols issued by the state.

It’s a big job: They must prepare dozens of attraction­s for daily use, rehire and train thousands of workers, and adopt a slew of new safety protocols that in many cases dramatical­ly alter how attraction­s will operate and how visitors will be expected to behave.

“It’s like turning an aircraft carrier,” said Scott Strobl, senior vice president of operations at Universal Studios Hollywood.

Making the challenge even more difficult: Park officials are not sure whether the state will release detailed safety protocols that affect which attraction­s can open, which need to be altered before they are available to visitors and which must remain offline for now.

Disney is preparing a range of game plans as it awaits a response from the state, said Kris Theiler, vice president of the Disneyland Park.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and California public health officials announced this month that with the rollout of vaccines and the drop in new COVID-19 cases, the state would allow theme parks to reopen earlier than previously anticipate­d. Parks in counties with low enough coronaviru­s transmissi­on can open as early as April 1.

The state has offered only a handful of guidelines: All park visitors must be California residents and wear masks, indoor dining is prohibited, and workers must be tested weekly for the coronaviru­s. For parks in counties in the secondmost-restrictiv­e tier of the state’s four-category reopening road map — the tier currently including Los Angeles and Orange counties — total park attendance will be capped at 15% of capacity, and parks’ individual indoor attraction­s will be limited to a maximum 15% capacity with time restrictio­ns.

Before the state unveiled the more relaxed reopening plans, a coalition of California theme parks proposed more detailed guidelines to the state. The ideas included limiting riders on attraction­s and limiting the time that parkgoers are crowded together in attraction­s and queues. Some of the guidelines proposed by the California Attraction­s and Parks Assn. were based on protocols adopted at theme parks that are already open in Florida, Europe and Asia.

Theme park executives say they are assuming the state will accept those guidelines or make only minor adjustment­s.

“We have some foundation­al points that we are working on,” Strobl said.

Only weeks remain to nail down the details and get everyone ready.

Disney Chief Executive Bob Chapek announced Wednesday that the theme parks at the Disneyland Resort in Anaheim will reopen April 30. Disney parks in Florida, Shanghai, Tokyo and Hong Kong are already open.

Universal Studios Hollywood is expected to open in late April, and Knott’s Berry Farm in Buena Park sometime in May. Six Flags Magic Mountain in Valencia has yet to announce a reopening date. Disney and Universal Studios Hollywood officials said single-day ticket prices at their parks are expected to be in line with last year’s prices.

The biggest challenge will be rehiring thousands of workers and training them on the safety guidelines they must follow and on ways to enforce safety protocols among parkgoers, theme park executives and union leaders say.

Disneyland has begun to recall about 10,000 furloughed workers, and Universal Studios Hollywood is expected to rehire about 5,000 employees. Disney already recalled about 1,000 employees and Universal Studios Hollywood rehired several hundred workers to staff the food and shopping events they’re launching this month.

A coalition of unions representi­ng about 17,000 workers at Disneyland has been meeting with Disney for months to hash out COVID-19 safety protocols for employees, including regular testing, providing maximum indoor ventilatio­n and protective equipment, said Austin Lynch, organizing director for Unite Here, Local 11, which represents hotel and restaurant workers at the resort.

“We feel pretty good about their readiness,” he said of Disney.

Some theme park employees who work in restaurant­s are already eligible to receive a coronaviru­s vaccine. The parks are encouragin­g employees to get vaccinated but are not requiring it.

To comply with the California rule prohibitin­g parks from admitting visitors from outside the state, park operators say they can require all visitors to submit a California ZIP Code or other informatio­n when booking tickets online.

To prevent visitors from crowding together, the parks are not yet relaunchin­g parades and nighttime spectacula­rs such as the World of Color water and light show at Disney California Adventure Park.

Park operators say the most dramatic changes will probably be made on rides that were designed to have parkgoers sit or stand close together for 15 minutes or more.

To reduce the risk of virus spread, Universal Studios Hollywood is delaying the opening of Despicable Me: Minions Mayhem and the Simpsons Ride, motion-simulator rides that put parkgoers in sideby-side seats in a theater setting.

In the Universal Studios backlot tour, plexiglass will be installed between the parkgoers and the drivers and ride narrators.

At Disneyland, a limit on seating is more likely on an attraction such as Pirates of the Caribbean, where riders sit next to one another on long benches in the floating vehicle, Theiler said. The ride operators will enforce such restrictio­ns.

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