South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

DeSantis signs bill eliminatin­g Disney’s Reedy Creek district

Credit-rating company places area on a negative watch; debt expected to transfer to Orange County

- By Steven Lemongello and Skyler Swisher

Gov. Ron DeSantis signed into law two bills targeting The Walt Disney Co. on Friday, eliminatin­g the company’s special Reedy Creek district and stripping its exemption from the “Big Tech” social media bill.

Despite warnings from Orange County leaders and other experts that dissolving the 55-year-old district would cause financial chaos, raise local taxes and affect services, DeSantis insisted “we’re going to take care of all that.”

“Don’t worry, we have everything thought out,” DeSantis said at a press conference in Hialeah. “Don’t let anyone tell you that somehow Disney is going to get a tax cut out of this; they’re going to pay more taxes as a result of that.”

Also on Friday, Fitch, a credit rating company, placed Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District on a negative watch, citing a “lack of clarity” about how the district’s assets and liabilitie­s would be allocated.

The negative watch means Reedy Creek’s credit ratings could be downgraded.

Fitch expects all property owned by the district, including its indebtedne­ss, to be transferre­d to Orange County and to a lesser extent Osceola County or to a successor agency. The rating agency expects “the mechanics of implementa­tion will be complicate­d, increasing the probabilit­y of negative rating action.”

The crowd at a Hialeah school booed when DeSantis first mentioned Disney, and the boos continued as he and other speakers pilloried the state’s largest single-site employer.

While the bill affects five other special districts, DeSantis was clear that Disney was the target, citing CEO Bob Chapek’s belated opposition to the so-called “don’t say gay” bill.

That bill will prohibit discussion of sexual orientatio­n or gender identity in schools up to the third grade and limits it to “age-appropriat­e” students in higher grades. Parents will also be able to sue school districts over the issue.

Republican­s argued the bill protects parental rights, while Democrats and LGBTQ groups contend it was intentiona­lly vague and could have a chilling effect on teachers, students and the LGTBQ community.

Chapek said he would pause all contributi­ons to politician­s in Florida and work to oppose similar bills in other states.

“I was very clear about saying, ‘You ain’t influencin­g me. I’m standing strong right here,’” DeSantis said Friday. “So it doesn’t matter. ... No big deal. We signed the bill.”

DeSantis then cited Chapek’s announceme­nt that they would work to repeal the bill.

“Incredibly, they say, ‘we are going to work to repeal parents’ rights in Florida,’” he said. “And I’m just thinking to myself, you’re a corporatio­n based in Burbank, California, and you’re going to marshal your economic might to attack the parents of my state. We view that as a provocatio­n, and we’re going to fight back against that.”

Disney has been the target of much of conservati­ve media over the last few weeks, with rhetoric labeling the company “groomers” and pedophile-enablers.

Two local Republican congressio­nal candidates joined a protest outside Disney World earlier this month. DeSantis claimed the company had “an intentiona­l agenda to inject sexuality in their programmin­g.”

The ratings affected by Fitch’s warning about Reedy Creek include $766 million of outstandin­g property tax-backed bonds, rated AA-, and $79 million of outstandin­g utility revenue and refunding bonds, rated A. The utility’s credit profile rating of A and the district’s issuer default rating of AAwere also placed on negative watch.

“The Negative Watch reflects the lack of clarity regarding the allocation of the RCID’s assets and liabilitie­s, including the administra­tion of revenues pledged to approximat­ely $1 billion in outstandin­g debt, following the dissolutio­n of RCID or its re-ratificati­on on or after June 1, 2023,” the announceme­nt reads.

Fitch lowered its score for “Rule of Law, Institutio­nal & Regulatory Quality,

Control of Corruption” for the district from a five to a three “to reflect state actions to dissolve the district, which points to a substantia­lly reduced degree of independen­ce from political pressure.”

“These actions potentiall­y diminish government effectiven­ess and could prove harmful to bondholder­s, which has a negative impact on the credit profile and is highly relevant to the Negative Watch action,” Fitch wrote.

Fitch said it would remove the negative watch

if DeSantis didn’t sign the bill, which he did just hours later, or if “the dissolutio­n plan preserves the credit quality and payment capacity of the respective revenue streams pledged to bondholder­s.”

“Prolonged uncertaint­y” would lead to a downgrade, Fitch concluded.

DeSantis also signed a third bill at the Friday event, the “Stop WOKE Act,” targeting critical race theory in schools. Earlier in the day, he quietly signed the bill approving his congressio­nal maps

that eliminate two Black districts.

President Biden slammed DeSantis and Republican­s at an event in Portland, Oregon, on Thursday, saying, “the Far Right has taken over that party.”

“And it’s not even conservati­ve in a traditiona­l sense of conservati­ve,” Biden said. “It’s mean. It’s ugly. It’s the way — look what’s happening down in Florida . ... They’re going after Mickey Mouse. I mean, seriously, think about it. As my friend used to say, ‘Who woulda thunk it?’”

 ?? DANIEL A. VARELA/THE MIAMI HERALD ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis publicly signs HB7,“individual freedom,”also dubbed the’“stop woke’“bill, during a news conference at Mater Academy Charter Middle/High School in Hialeah Gardens on Friday. DeSantis also signed two other bills into law, including one regarding the “big tech” bill signed last year but set aside due to a court ruling, and the special districts bill, which relates to the Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District.
DANIEL A. VARELA/THE MIAMI HERALD Gov. Ron DeSantis publicly signs HB7,“individual freedom,”also dubbed the’“stop woke’“bill, during a news conference at Mater Academy Charter Middle/High School in Hialeah Gardens on Friday. DeSantis also signed two other bills into law, including one regarding the “big tech” bill signed last year but set aside due to a court ruling, and the special districts bill, which relates to the Reedy Creek Improvemen­t District.

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