Toronto Star

Orlando’s lifeline riding out the pandemic

Restarting theme parks in post- pandemic world a huge task, experts say

- GABRIELLE RUSSON

ORLANDO, FLA.— The year 2020 brought images of Orlando never seen before.

Interstate 4, the eternally trafficclo­gged gateway to the theme parks, was quiet. The Magic Kingdom, the world’s busiest park, was empty for months, a happy place that previously had shut down for just a day or two for hurricanes or other emergencie­s.

The coronaviru­s pandemic is expected to recede in 2021 as vaccines become available.

But restarting Orlando’s tourism machine will be a monumental task, and experts don’t agree on how much longer the region and its hundreds of thousands of industry workers will suffer.

Disney should start to bounce back in the spring, Wall Street analyst Bob Boyd predicts. By the end of 2021, Boyd said Disney and the other theme parks could face a new problem: not being able to find enough employees to hire.

But Dennis Spiegel expects 2021 will be “another bump in the road” as he predicts the industry won’t fully bounce back for two more years.

In the meantime, he wonders if more reductions could come, like some parks operating only five days a week to save money since there aren’t too many other things left to cut.

“What do people do when they travel, particular­ly for the family vacation to Orlando? They make that reservatio­n four to six months in advance. Some even further. And nobody’s doing that right now,” said Speigel, CEO of Internatio­nal Theme Park Services.

Disney parks chair Josh D’Amaro spoke of the theme park industry’s resilience in November.

“Our industry is hurting, it’s hurting from the presence of COVID- 19 in our communitie­s,” D’Amaro said at a virtual convention. “But unlike some industries impacted by the pandemic, ours is here to stay, and it’s here to grow.”

The theme parks, the lifeline of Orlando’s economy, have struggled in the pandemic, and so have the nearby hotels, restaurant­s and rental car companies, all of which endured mass layoffs.

In March, the Orange County tax collected on hotel rooms suffered the worst singlemont­h crash in its 40- year history, falling by $ 17.6 million ( U. S.), or 57 per cent, from the same month a year before. By the end of 2020, revenue was rebounding. It generated $ 7.03 million in September, still far less than the $ 17.7 million brought in a year earlier.

Awhole new world

Since July, Disney World reemerged from the pandemic shutdown in the spring as a different place.

Everyone wears masks. The lines are spaced out, two metres apart.

And some of the things that make Disney special, such as hugging Mickey Mouse or watching fireworks explode over Cinderella Castle, are gone.

The resort hasn’t announced when it will restore them, but some theme park analysts say the old ways of life pre- COVID could re- emerge soon.

“Things like fireworks, I think they can bring that back relatively quickly,” said Robert Niles, a longtime journalist who pens a regular column for California’s Orange County Register and a blog, ThemeParkI­nsider. com.

By spring, Boyd said he predicts the parks’ physical distancing rules will relax, allowing fireworks and other entertainm­ent to “reawaken.”

“2021, especially the first half of 2021, I think it’s going be a story of things becoming increasing­ly more normal,” Boyd said.

Already, as of Jan. 1, people can start “hopping” between two parks again. Disney has begun testing its fireworks displays, perhaps a sign of what lies ahead.

Other Disney World iconic experience­s might prove more challengin­g to bring back.

Among the 32,000 Disney layoffs this year were many Equity actors who performed in shows such as the Festival of the Lion Kingdom, the parks’ adaptation of the beloved musical, or the longtime running Indiana Jones Stunt Show.

“Some of these large- cast musical production­s, ( those) might take a little while because you need to be able to show you’ve got the income coming in to justify that type of expense,” Niles said.

Will tourists come back?

Some analysts say consumers whose trips were disrupted in 2020 are eager to return to the parks, which bodes well for Disney, Universal Orlando and SeaWorld in 2021.

“There’s just so much pent- up demand to do the things we’ve been unable to do for what’s getting close to a year,” said Jeremy Bowman, an analyst at Motley Fool.

Boyd predicts internatio­nal travel to pick up starting in summer 2021.

Speigel is unconvince­d airline travel will recover swiftly. Orlando Internatio­nal Airport’s passenger count dropped 41 per cent to about 29 million in 2020 compared to 2019.

“You just don’t walk in and flip the switch and the next day and all this comes right back on,” Speigel said.

So far, the Orange County County Convention Center has cancelled 67 convention­s with an estimated economic impact of $ 1.71 billion and reschedule­d 48 others amid the pandemic. Some major events are still going on as planned, such as the recent AKC National Championsh­ip and a surf expo in January, said spokespers­on Nadia Vanderhoof.

Some question if Americans are ready to splurge on lavish vacations after the emotional scars of 2020, where many felt the pain of losing a loved one to the virus, the isolation of being stuck at home, or the anxiety of losing their jobs.

“There’s a huge challenge we’re facing in the psychologi­cal recovery from this stressful year,” Niles said. “We’re dealing with a widespread mental trauma on a scale that we have not seen in the United States, probably since World War II ... Even for people whose response to stress is book a vacation to Orlando, a lot of them are going to get there and just they’re not going to feel the happiness that they thought they were going to feel.”

After the vaccine is widely available, shedding the 2020 mindset could take time, theme park reporter Jim Hill warned.

“How many of us are going to able to go, ‘ OK, let me pull off my mask and stand within six inches of somebody in line for the Haunted Mansion,’” said Hill, who runs JimHillMed­ia. com and co- hosts the Disney Dish Podcast.

The 2021 ride lineup

What could entice visitors back to the parks next year are new thrill rides and the nostalgia for Disney World’s 50th- anniversar­y celebratio­n.

Busch Gardens will debut its dizzying 63- metre- tall Iron Gwazi coaster that goes 122 km/ h. SeaWorld Orlando gets the family friendly Ice Breaker coaster, too.

Universal is building its Jurassic World VelociCoas­ter at Islands of Adventure that is set to open in the summer and has generated a buzz on social media as people followed the constructi­on.

Universal declined to say when it plans to continue constructi­on on Epic Universe, its third Orlando theme park, after officials at parent company Comcast announced they are waiting for the economy to improve before resuming what’s estimated to be a multibilli­ondollar project.

“The folks in Comcast, the ones who will be signing the cheques that trickle down to NBC Universal, they want assurances that this is actually going to work. And in fact, all eyes right now are on February 2021, what happens in Universal Japan when Super Mario Land opens up,” Hill said.

“If it is the success that they think it’s going to be, that will power the decision to turn the key that much faster for Epic Universe.”

Perhaps the biggest seller for families to come to Disney World is its 50th anniversar­y, Boyd said, predicting the celebratio­n could last up to two years tied to the Oct. 1, 2021, date.

The milestone helps Disney fire up its machine “in a really big way,” he said.

Disney also is building new rides, the soonest to open in 2021 is expected to be the “Ratatouill­e” family ride at Epcot.

Two thrill rides, one of the world’s longest indoor coasters based off “Guardians of the Galaxy” at Epcot and the Tron coaster at the Magic Kingdom, are also under constructi­on with no official ride opening dates and analysts expect them to open in late 2021 or beyond.

‘ The heart is missing’

The story isn’t just how the parks and hotels recover from the upheaval in 2021. How will the employees left behind heal?

Thousands of people lost their Orlando jobs or were indefinite­ly furloughed in sweeping cuts that decimated Disney, Universal and SeaWorld, from hotel housekeepe­rs to the designers planning the next big thing to ride attendants, performers and salaried managers.

At Disney alone, nearly 18,000 employees in Florida were laid off during massive cuts to the theme park division.

The Fowlers were among them.

Ashley McKay Fowler and Kyle Fowler, both 35, toured and performed on Disney Cruise Line until they moved to Central Florida in 2015, eager for the stability of living in a house and earning a paycheque doing what they loved.

The couple booked multiple gigs in some of the iconic shows at Disney World. Kyle performed in “Finding Nemo The Musical” and in Dapper Dans, the barbershop quartet at the Magic Kingdom that has enthralled him since he was a kid. Ashley sang in the long- running Hoop- Dee- Doo Revue dinner show at Disney’s Fort Wilderness Resort.

“It fills your cup,” Kyle said of being a performer. “There are certain things that you can’t quite explain, except you just know that it fills an aspect of you that isn’t filled somewhere else.”

In mid- March, Ashley was in the middle of a Hoop- Dee rehearsal, relearning her place on stage with physical distancing when the show was abruptly cancelled.

Disney World was closing for maybe two weeks, the employees thought.

“We’ll be back. That’s kind of how everyone felt,” Kyle said.

The performers left, unaware this was their last time on a Disney World stage.

The first month of furlough felt like a weird vacation, waiting to get called back to work.

“We were glued to Facebook groups and group chats,” said Ashley, who had to wait five months to collect her unemployme­nt benefits. “We were all just clinging, ‘ Have you heard anything?’”

Life went on even as their careers were frozen. Their beloved dog died of cancer, and they went through a miscarriag­e. They wished they were back at Disney again with the distractio­n of a workday.

In July, Disney World reopened without them, and scores of other actors and singers. “The heart is missing,” Ashley said. “Because you can ride rides anywhere.”

The Fowlers received their terminatio­n notices effective Dec. 31, with the possibilit­y of being recalled in a year if Disney shows resume. The Fowlers said they can’t wait for that because of all the unknowns.

At first, they looked for different lines of work, but they struggled to find good- paying jobs. So they focused on their side hustles.

Ashley worked on her voice acting business, and Kyle his financial coaching, a passion he found after the couple paid off their debt before the pandemic happened.

By the end of the year, good things were happening again. Kyle landed a job with a mortgagele­nding company that starts next year. The couple got aFrench bulldog puppy.

With their Disney careers on hold, the Fowlers booked gigs with a Tampa- based Frankie Valli Tribute band.

At their first concert back in front of a masked crowd, they felt the thrill of finally singing again, and a release of the emotions they had experience­d in 2020. “I left it all on the floor,” Kyle said.

 ?? JOE BURBANK ORLANDO SENTINEL FILE PHOTO ?? All is quiet at the parking plaza entrance to the Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World last March. Theme parks in Orlando have struggled in the pandemic, and so have the nearby hotels, restaurant­s and rental car companies, all of which endured mass layoffs.
JOE BURBANK ORLANDO SENTINEL FILE PHOTO All is quiet at the parking plaza entrance to the Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World last March. Theme parks in Orlando have struggled in the pandemic, and so have the nearby hotels, restaurant­s and rental car companies, all of which endured mass layoffs.
 ?? STEPHEN M. DOWELL ORLANDO SENTINEL FILE PHOTO ?? The Interstate 4 — the eternally traffic- clogged gateway to the theme parks — wears a deserted look last March, one of the haunting images of the coronaviru­s pandemic in the U. S.
STEPHEN M. DOWELL ORLANDO SENTINEL FILE PHOTO The Interstate 4 — the eternally traffic- clogged gateway to the theme parks — wears a deserted look last March, one of the haunting images of the coronaviru­s pandemic in the U. S.
 ?? JOE BURBANK ORLANDO SENTINEL FILE PHOTO ?? A guest dons a Snow White costume next to a statue of Roy O. Disney and Minnie Mouse at the Magic Kingdom in Walt Disney World in September. Disney World has planned new thrill rides and a lot of nostalgia for its 50th- anniversar­y celebratio­n this year.
JOE BURBANK ORLANDO SENTINEL FILE PHOTO A guest dons a Snow White costume next to a statue of Roy O. Disney and Minnie Mouse at the Magic Kingdom in Walt Disney World in September. Disney World has planned new thrill rides and a lot of nostalgia for its 50th- anniversar­y celebratio­n this year.

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