Los Angeles Times

Judge rejects suit over dissolutio­n of Florida district

Residents’ complaint over the GOP action against Disney is beyond her purview, the federal jurist says.

- By Ryan Faughnder Times staff writer Hugo Martin contribute­d to this report.

A federal judge on Tuesday dismissed a taxpayer lawsuit from Florida residents who sued the state and its Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, over a decision to dissolve Walt Disney Co.’s special self-governing district near Orlando.

The lawsuit, filed last week in U.S. District Court in Miami, alleged that the move to eliminate the district was unconstitu­tional, violated the state’s legal and contractua­l obligation­s and would saddle taxpayers with a $1-billion debt burden.

The legal battle is part of the broader fallout from Disney’s fight with Florida over the Parental Rights in Education law, which opponents have derisively nicknamed “Don’t Say Gay” legislatio­n.

DeSantis last month signed a law that would eliminate Disney’s special tax and self-ruling status in central Florida by axing the Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District, which was created by the state Legislatur­e in 1967 to essentiall­y give Disney its own municipal government.

State lawmakers voted to scrap the district during a special legislativ­e session after Disney said it wanted to see the Parental Rights bill, which activists see as an attack on LGBTQ youths, repealed or blocked by the courts.

The decision to dismantle Reedy Creek, covering a 25,000-acre area that is home to Walt Disney World Resort, was widely seen as retaliatio­n against Disney for its stance against the law, which bans classroom instructio­n on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity in kindergart­en through third grade. The law allows parents to sue school districts over violations.

In an order dismissing the taxpayer lawsuit, Chief Judge Cecilia M. Altonaga wrote that the complaint was out of the court’s jurisdicti­on.

Her order said state officials could not be sued in federal court over claims arising from alleged violations of state law. She also said state residents could not sue over alleged violations of Disney’s 1st Amendment rights, only their own constituti­onal rights.

Additional­ly, Altonaga noted that the law eliminatin­g the district does not go into effect until July 1 and called the taxpayers’ claims of harm “highly speculativ­e.”

“Plaintiffs’ theory of standing is that the eliminatio­n of the Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District might result in financial harm to Plaintiffs by virtue of a tax increase that has not yet been enacted,” Altonaga wrote. The bill “itself will not raise Plaintiffs’ taxes.”

William Sanchez, a lawyer for the Florida plaintiffs, did not immediatel­y respond to The Times’ request for comment.

The dismissed complaint was filed on behalf of four Florida residents — three in Osceola County and one in Orange County. Their suit alleged that the state violated legal obligation­s forbidding it from dissolving the district without resolving its outstandin­g debt, which some experts have said would be passed on to surroundin­g counties.

DeSantis press secretary Christina Pushaw applauded the judge’s decision and reiterated the governor’s position that eliminatin­g the district will not create an additional tax burden for Floridians. A plan for shutting down the district has not been released.

“Perhaps this will put to rest the speculatio­n from those who are hoping — with no basis in reality — that this will end in some sort of taxpayer or state burden that partisan critics can use against the governor,” Pushaw said in an email. “In reality, this opportunit­y can, and should be utilized to generate more taxes from Disney, as the governor has said.”

The district would be ended June 1, 2023, but could be reinstated after that date, meaning that Disney and the state have about a year to come up with a new agreement.

The Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District spans roughly 40 square miles in both Orange and Osceola counties.

The dispute over Florida’s Parental Rights legislatio­n and Disney’s response to it has stretched on for weeks, giving DeSantis, a possible 2024 presidenti­al contender, a massive Hollywood foil.

After Disney Chief Executive Bob Chapek voiced his concerns, DeSantis accused Disney of being a “woke” corporatio­n trying to impose liberal values on Florida. Fox News and other conservati­ve media jumped into the culture war, with commentato­rs including Laura Ingraham accusing Disney of pushing a “sexual agenda” on kids.

In another move to punish Disney, a group of Republican lawmakers has vowed to oppose any effort to extend the company’s copyright protection for Mickey Mouse — already extended twice since the original expiration date in 1984.

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