El Dorado News-Times

Disney faces losing control of its kingdom with Florida bill

- BY MIKE SCHNEIDER

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Disney’s government in Florida has been the envy of any private business, with its unpreceden­ted powers in deciding what to build and how to build it at the Walt Disney World Resort, issuing bonds and holding the ability to build its own nuclear plant if it wanted.

Those days are numbered as a new bill released this week puts the entertainm­ent giant’s Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District firmly in the control of Florida’s governor and legislativ­e leaders in what some see as punishment for Disney’s opposition to the so-called “Don’t Say Gay” law championed by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e.

The uniqueness of Disney’ government, where building inspectors examine black box structures holding thrill rides instead of office buildings, also complicate­s matters. The district essentiall­y runs a midsize city. On any given day, as many as 350,000 people are on Disney World’s 27,000 acres as theme park visitors, overnight hotel guests or employees. The 55-year-old district has to manage the traffic, dispose of the waste and control the plentiful mosquitoes.

The bill prohibits anybody who has worked or had a contract with a theme park or entertainm­ent complex in the past three years, or their relatives, from serving on the revamped district’s board of supervisor­s, a prohibitio­n that some experts say eliminates people with expertise in the field.

Under the bill’s proposals, Florida’s governor appoints the five-member board of supervisor­s to the renamed Central Florida Tourism Oversight District instead of Disney. Limits would be placed on the district’s autonomy by making it subject to oversight and regulation by state agencies, and it would be unable to adopt any codes that conflict with state regulation­s. The district also would no longer have the ability, if it wanted, to own and operate an airport, stadium, convention center or nuclear power plant.

The changes proposed in the legislatio­n were welcomed by at least one group of Reedy Creek employees — firefighte­rs who have clashed in the past with district leaders.

Tim Stromsnes, a spokespers­on for Reedy Creek Profession­al Firefighte­rs Local 2117, said all the current board cares about is “bonds and low-interest loans for building Disney infrastruc­ture, and zero about treating its employees fairly.”

“We think they are going to be more receptive to first responders,” Stomsnes said Tuesday of the proposed new board. “They’re calling the governor a fascist for doing this … but he is actually fixing a fascist, Disney-owned government.”

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