Los Angeles Times

Anaheim: Give Mickey a break

The legislatio­n would allow large and small theme parks to meet the same standards.

- By Ben Brazil Brazil writes for Times Community News.

City Council backs a bill that would put Disneyland on same reopening path as smaller parks.

The Anaheim City Council is backing a state bill that could allow Disneyland to reopen from its pandemic closure earlier than expected.

The council voted 6 to1 in favor of showing support for Assembly Bill 420, which was introduced this month by Assemblyme­mbers Sharon Quirk-Silva (D-Fullerton), who serves north Orange County, and Suzette Valladares (R-Newhall).

The bill would allow larger theme parks such as Disneyland and Knott’s Berry Farm to reopen after meeting the same requiremen­ts as smaller amusement parks.

The state’s theme park reopening guidelines hold that a larger theme park can reopen at 25% capacity when its county is in the minimal tier of less than one new COVID case per 100,000 people per day and a coronaviru­s positivity rate of less than 2%.

Smaller theme parks can operate at limited capacity once their county has reached the moderate tier of 1 to 3.9 new COVID cases per 100,000 people per day and a coronaviru­s positivity rate of 2% to 4.9%.

Orange County is still in the widespread tier, which is the most restrictiv­e. The four-tier system is ranked widespread, substantia­l, moderate and minimal.

“Anything that we can do to safely reopen theme parks is critical to economic recovery for our city and region,” said Mayor Harry Sidhu, who proposed the item.

Sidhu and other Orange County politician­s have called on Gov. Gavin Newsom before to make a pathway for reopening Disneyland. Sidhu’s campaign received $2,000 from Disney during his mayoral run in 2018. Disney donated at least $1.6 million to candidates and city ballot measures during the 2018 election, including to current council members Jordan Brandman and Trevor O’Neil.

Sidhu said Tuesday that large theme parks such as Disneyland have the resources to enforce the best available safety protocols. He also mentioned that reopening the county’s larger theme parks would help boost the local economy.

“This means tens of thousands of people could go back to work earlier,” Sidhu said. “It could mean the city could start our physical recovery sooner or that we could continue to provide essential services to the residents.”

The only dissenting vote was from Councilman Jose Moreno, who said the council should be focusing more on public health.

“I am extremely worried because it seems that we can’t keep our eye on the ball,” said Moreno, a staunch critic of Disneyland.

He added that the state bill would put the COVID-19 risk at Disneyland on par with small parks such as Adventure City in Stanton, which sits on about two acres. He said that while he was impressed by Disneyland’s “bubble environmen­t,” he is more worried about the potential spreading of the virus in the surroundin­g resort area.

“We are talking about pushing legislatio­n to allow sooner 25,000 to 35,000 visitors to come to Anaheim every single day,” Moreno said. “Not to mention the 5,000 to 10,000 employees who will have to work to serve those folks.”

Moreno also noted that Anaheim is taking the brunt of the county’s coronaviru­s cases along with Santa Ana, and the areas surroundin­g the resort are hot spots for the virus, combining for about 50,000 cases. He said reopening Disneyland could cause the virus to spread further among children and the Latino population, which has been disproport­ionately affected by the virus. Moreno’s views failed to gain the support of other council members.

“Public health is currently the priority and focus, and public health will continue to be that until we can overcome this pandemic,” Councilman Avelino Valencia said. “However, with that being said, we do need to at least have conversati­ons about reenergizi­ng our economy in a safe manner. And with that, I will be supportive of the resolution.”

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