Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Disney makes disabled wait too long, suits allege

- By Hugo Martín

LOS ANGELES — Lawsuits against Walt Disney Co. are moving ahead in California and Florida, challengin­g how the company allows disabled people to access theme park attraction­s.

Both lawsuits, filed by the same lead attorney, Tampa-based Andy Dogali, accuse the operator of the world’s most popular theme parks of violating the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act by making parkgoers with autism and other disabiliti­es wait too long to get on a ride. In court records, Dogali says he has nearly 100 plaintiffs wanting to challenge Disney’s policy.

Asked to comment on the lawsuits, Disney issued a one-sentence statement: “Disney Parks have an unwavering commitment to providing an inclusive and accessible environmen­t for all our guests.”

The two lawsuits take aim at the 2013 decision by Disney to end a policy that gave visitors with disabiliti­es and their family members a “Guest Assistance Card,” allowing them to go directly onto rides, skipping long lines.

The lawsuits say the new policy is unfair because it treats all visitors with disabiliti­es the same and that children and adults with autism might not understand the concept of waiting and taking turns and could become upset if they are forced to wait for a ride at a noisy theme park.

Disney representa­tives said the old system was scrapped because it was often abused by parkgoers who hired people with disabiliti­es to accompany them into the parks to avoid the queues. Under the new policy, visitors with disabiliti­es are given a card that lets them return to an attraction at a scheduled time to avoid the longest lines, similar to the system known as FastPass.

Most of the queues for Disney rides have been upgraded to be wheelchair accessible, leaving the new policy to primarily affect visitors with “cognitive impairment­s,” such as autism, according to the lawsuits.

The lawsuits ask for legal costs and “other relief ” that the court may choose.

“The disabled plaintiff, like other persons with cognitive impairment­s, is mentally and physically incapable of traveling across the park to the site of an attraction only to be told to come back later,” according to the Florida lawsuit.

One of the lawsuits, originally filed in 2014 in federal court in Los Angeles on behalf of 26 plaintiffs, was transferre­d to a U.S. District Court in Florida because most of the plaintiffs complained about access to rides at the Walt Disney World Resort in Florida. A judge rejected a later request by Dogali to add 69 new plaintiffs with a total of more than 200 counts.

A second lawsuit, making similar allegation­s, was filed in 2015 in federal court in Los Angeles, targeting the access policy for customers with disabiliti­es at the Disneyland Resort in Anaheim.

A district judge in Florida threw out the Florida lawsuit in 2016, giving Disney a victory, but an appeals court judge sent the case back to the original District Court to rule on the fairness of Disney’s policy for each individual plaintiff, said Eugene Feldman, one of the attorneys for the California plaintiffs.

 ?? PATRICK CONNOLLY/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Lawsuits in Florida and California say Disney violates the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act.
PATRICK CONNOLLY/ORLANDO SENTINEL Lawsuits in Florida and California say Disney violates the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act.

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