Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Florida set to end, or renegotiat­e, Disney’s 55-year-old government

- BY MIKE SCHNEIDER AND CURT ANDERSON

ORLANDO, Fla. — The idea was presented to Florida lawmakers in a movie house outside Orlando 55 years ago, with Walt Disney, who had died less than two months earlier, helping make the pitch from the screen: Let Disney form its own government and in exchange it would create a futuristic city of tomorrow.

That city never materializ­ed, but Walt Disney World became an economic juggernaut with four theme parks and two dozen hotels, while its government retained unpreceden­ted powers in deciding what and how to build, issuing bonds and holding the ability to build its own nuclear plant if it wanted.

Now, five decades later, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and lawmakers have moved to end Disney’s government in a move that jeopardize­s the symbiotic relationsh­ip between the state and company. The high-profile attack by a politician from a GOP that has historical­ly championed its ties to business follows the company’s opposition to what critics have dubbed the “Don’t Say Gay” law barring instructio­n on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity in kindergart­en through third grade.

Republican Rep. Randy Fine, sponsor of the bill to scrap the Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District, as the Disney government entity is known, said it is time for a change.

“You kick the hornet’s nest, things come up. And I will say this: You got me on one thing — this bill does target one company. It targets the Walt Disney Co.,” Fine said. “You want to know why? Because they are the only company in the state that has ever been granted the right to govern themselves.”

In an email fundraisin­g pitch Wednesday, DeSantis, a potential Republican presidenti­al candidate in 2024, put it this way:

“Disney has gotten away with special deals from the state of Florida for way too long. It took a look under the hood to see what Disney has become to truly understand their inappropri­ate influence,” the governor’s email said.

“If Disney wants to pick a fight, they chose the wrong guy,” the email added.

Disney, based in Burbank, California, had more than $67 billion in revenue in 2021 and has declined comment on the Florida legislatio­n, which was passed by the legislatur­e on Thursday and signed into law by DeSantis

on Friday. The legislatio­n will eliminate the Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District, as the 55-year-old Disney government is known, as well as a handful of other similar districts by June 2023. It does allow for the districts to be reestablis­hed, leaving an avenue to renegotiat­e its future.

Tensions erupted Thursday as Democrats staged a sit-in protest on the House floor against the map, prompting Republican­s to walk out briefly.

Before Reedy Creek became Disney’s government, it was a drainage district created to help manage the 27,000 acres that the company secretly acquired parcel by parcel in the mid-1960s.

At first, news accounts speculated that “a new and large industrial complex” might be coming to the area. Some reports linked it to the Kennedy Space Center about an hour’s drive away in Cape Canaveral. Finally, on Oct. 21, 1965, the Orlando Sentinel broke a story with this headline: “We Say: ‘Mystery Industry’ is Disney.”

A few days later, then-Gov. Haydon Burns confirmed the Disney plan, saying it would be “the greatest attraction in the history of Florida.”

That would prove true over the decades as metro Orlando became the most visited destinatio­n in the U.S., attracting 75 million tourists annually before the pandemic. The metro area,

which added Universal and SeaWorld theme park resorts, grew from 305,000 residents in 1970, the year before Disney World opened, to almost 2.7 million residents last year.

In some ways, the Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District was built on a misreprese­ntation when company officials came to Florida lawmakers with their plans to build an East Coast Disneyland. After the company’s first theme park in southern California was built in the 1950s, motels and tourist shops encroached around the property, and Walt Disney wanted to make sure the same thing didn’t happen in Florida.

Along with a theme park, Disney officials led by Roy Disney, Walt’s brother, told Florida

lawmakers in 1967 that they planned to build a futuristic city — the Experiment­al Prototype Community of Tomorrow, also known as Epcot.

The proposed city would include a rapid transit system and urban planning innovation­s, so Disney needed autonomy in the district for building and deciding how to use the land, they said. The futuristic city never materializ­ed, and instead Epcot morphed into a second theme park that opened in 1982.

“They said they were going to do one thing and they did another,” said retired Rollins College political scientist Richard Foglesong, whose book “Married to the Mouse” recounted the formation of Reedy Creek. “In that respect, it was legally infirm. I think that is a factual argument.”

Reedy Creek was allowed to build its own roads, run its own wastewater treatment plants, operate its own fire department, set its own building codes and inspect Disney buildings for safety. In the current budget year, the district had $169 million in revenues and $178 million in expenditur­es.

Reedy Creek essentiall­y runs a midsize city. On any given day, as many as 350,000 people are on Disney World property as theme park visitors, overnight hotel guests or employees. The district has to manage

the traffic, dispose of the waste and control the plentiful mosquitoes in a territory once called Mosquito County.

Even though Reedy Creek’s primary task is to operate Disney World, it is home to

fewer than 50 residents living in manufactur­ed homes in two tiny communitie­s, Bay Lake and Lake Buena Vista. The two municipali­ties were formed to support the legal framework of the Reedy Creek Improvemen­t

District, which is governed by a five-member Board of Supervisor­s with four-year terms. The supervisor­s must be landowners within Reedy Creek, and to qualify, Disney gives them a small piece of land that they must give back once they leave the board.

That’s not the only thing Disney has given out over the decades.

Disney has been a major political player in Florida and the country. The Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks political campaign spending, reported that in the 2020 campaign cycle, Walt Disney Co. and affiliates made more than $20 million in political contributi­ons to both Republican­s and Democrats.

That year, the most recent in which figures are available, Disney-related entities funneled $10.5 million to the America First Action committee, which supports former President Donald Trump. Disney also contribute­d $1.2 million to support President Joe Biden’s campaign.

“I think Disney is stuck a bit,” Foglesong said. “They had tried to play it both ways, making contributi­ons to what you can only call right-wing Republican­s. They thought they could have it both ways — be the company of motherhood and apple pie and fund these reactionar­y Republican politician­s.”

 ?? JIM KERLIN/AP ?? Joe Fowler, 75, a retired Navy admiral, points out the spot being prepared for the Disney World project near Orlando, Florida, on May 2, 1969. The idea was presented to Florida lawmakers 55 years ago: Let Disney form its own government, and in exchange it would create a futuristic city of tomorrow.
JIM KERLIN/AP Joe Fowler, 75, a retired Navy admiral, points out the spot being prepared for the Disney World project near Orlando, Florida, on May 2, 1969. The idea was presented to Florida lawmakers 55 years ago: Let Disney form its own government, and in exchange it would create a futuristic city of tomorrow.
 ?? PHIL SEARS/AP ?? Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, D-Orlando (blue suit, in back), yells his objection as Republican­s in Florida’s House of Representa­tives applaud after the bill affecting Disney property passed Thursday.
PHIL SEARS/AP Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, D-Orlando (blue suit, in back), yells his objection as Republican­s in Florida’s House of Representa­tives applaud after the bill affecting Disney property passed Thursday.

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