The Commercial Appeal

Disney’s expansion plan clears big hurdle

Company set to invest $1.9B over next decade

- Dawn Chmielewsk­i and Lisa Richwine

Plans to expand the Disneyland Resort cleared a major hurdle Wednesday, as local officials endorsed a new blueprint governing the developmen­t of Walt Disney’s Southern California theme parks over the next 40 years.

The Anaheim City Council approved a plan, called Disneyland­forward, that one researcher estimated would create as many as 4,520 constructi­on jobs per year of developmen­t and an additional 26,764 parks-related positions over the coming decades.

A second procedural council vote – to consider zoning changes, revisions in the city’s developmen­t agreement with Disney and an analysis of environmen­tal impacts – is scheduled for May 7. If adopted, the changes would take effect after 30 days, clearing the way for Disney to invest a minimum of $1.9 billion in new theme park experience­s and lodging over the next decade.

Parks have become a reliable profit engine for Disney and have helped cushion losses in the Disney+ streaming business, which is expected to become profitable by September. The company last year announced it would deepen its investment in its parks, and double the capacity of its cruise line, committing $60 billion over the next decade.

Disneyland, the company’s first theme park, opened in 1955. As it grew in popularity, the city of Anaheim approved plans that would govern its growth, creating zones designated for specific types of developmen­ts.

In 2021, Disney submitted its Disneyland­forward plan, which would give the company flexibilit­y in how it could develop its 490-acre California property. Disney is looking to blend hotels, shops and attraction­s within the same themed world, as it has in Fantasy Springs, which opens June 6 at Tokyo Disneysea Park.

The proposal calls for allowing theme park attraction­s alongside hotels on the west side of Disneyland Drive and theme park attraction­s alongside new shopping, dining and entertainm­ent to the southeast on what is today the Toy Story Parking Area.

Dozens of members of the public addressed the council before the vote. Many voiced enthusiast­ic support for the job opportunit­ies and revenue they expected the expansion to bring to the area. Some local residents, however, said they would be harmed by increased traffic and noise and the conversion of a public road known as Magic Way into a pedestrian walkway.

“A project like Disneyland­forward will only further exacerbate the current problems,” said Anaheim resident Trangdai Glassey. “To disregard the human costs from a project of this scope is unthinkabl­e.”

The company has not said what attraction­s and amenities it plans to add in California, though it has pointed to attraction­s found elsewhere, such as the “mammalian metropolis” of Zootopia at Shanghai Disneyland.

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