Archive for the ‘Disney World’ Category

NY Post: Wealthy moms hire disabled guides to skip lines at Disney World

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(Paul Thompson / Getty)

Rich moms are paying disabled guides to get their kids to the front of long lines at Disney World. (Paul Thompson / Getty)

What’s the latest indulgence for wealthy parents? A day at Disney World with a disabled guide who can help you and your precious saplings jump to the front of long lines, according to the New York Post.

These parents are taking advantage of Disney World’s policy that allows guests in a wheelchair or motorized scooter, plus up to five members of their party, to use auxiliary entrances intended to offer disabled guests “a more convenient entrance to the attraction.”  While the auxiliary entrances are “not intended to bypass waiting lines,” they are known to get guests on a ride much faster.

“My daughter waited one minute to get on ‘It’s a Small World’ — the other kids had to wait 2 1/2 hours,” one mom, who hired a disabled guide through Dream Tours Florida, told the Post. “This is how the 1 percent does Disney.”

The guides reportedly cost $130 an hour or $1,040 for an eight-hour day. This might seem high, especially since you’re also paying entrance fees, but Disney World’s comparable VIP service that gets groups to the front of lines costs $315 to $355 an hour.

The New York Post doesn’t quote any named sources in its article and messages left with the tour company singled out in the article remained unanswered, but Disney is still investigating the situation.

“We are thoroughly reviewing the situation and will take appropriate steps to deter this type of activity,” spokesperson Bryan Malenius, Yahoo.com. ”It is unacceptable to abuse accommodations that were designed for guests with disabilities.”

The New York Post was tipped off to the scam by social anthropologist Dr. Wednesday Martin, who learned about the underground network while doing research for her upcoming book “Primates of Park Avenue.”

“It’s insider knowledge that very few have and share carefully,” Dr. Martin told the Post.

While some New York Post readers are pointed out that the scam is a good deal for disabled people who are making some good money, I find it disgraceful. These people are clearly taking advantage of Disney policy. Plus, as someone who took her kids to Disneyland for the day last year, I don’t think the lines are that bad if you’re smart about planning out your day and using FastPasses. And if you have to wait in a 45-minute line, what’s the worst thing that might happen? You might have a conversation with your teenager or play patty-cake with your toddler.

Disability scams to make life a little easier aren’t anything new. The Wall Street Journal recently reported on the trend of travelers faking a disability to get a wheelchair to speed through security. Officials at Los Angeles International Airport say that 15 percent of wheel chair users are phony. In San Francisco, drivers are known to “exaggerate injuries to convince doctors to sign documents” so they can obtain handicap placards that give them special parking privileges. In a city where street parking is scarce and meter rates high, these placards can save someone a lot of time and money.

Kids under age 14 can no longer enter Disney parks alone

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These kids are old enough to enjoy Disneyland, but too young to explore the park alone. Good thing Mom is taking the photo!

If you were planning to visit Disneyland over spring break and let your 13-year-old and his friend of the same age wander the park alone while you sat by the pool back at the hotel, you better rethink your plans.

Starting March 23, U.S. Disney theme parks will no longer allow kids under age 14 to enter unless they’re accompanied by someone age 14 or older.

The policy change wasn’t triggered by a particular incident. Rather it’s meant to streamline the parks’ varied age policies, which parents are often confused by. Now Disney World in Orlando and Disneyland and Disney California Adventure in Anaheim will all have the same policy.

“We regularly review all policies and identified an opportunity to provide a consistent age of admission and address a question we occasionally get from parents,” Disneyland spokeswoman Suzi Brown told the Orange County Register.

The policy won’t be enforced by employees checking IDs at the entrance gates because most children under age 14 don’t have official IDs. Instead employees will be given the authority to question and contact the parents of children who are entering the park alone and appear to be under age 14.

Father kills daughter’s Disney dream

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Make-A-Wish-Foundation

(Katherine Welles / Shutterstock)

An Ohio father has come under fire for putting the brakes on his daughter’s dream trip to Disney World.

William May of Toledo, Ohio, refused to sign off on the vacation that his 4-year-old daughter McKenna May received as a donation from the Make-A-Wish Foundation, an organization that grants wishes to children with life-threatening medical conditions.

McKenna has battled leukemia since 2010 and recently two of her dreams came true, according to the Sentinel-Tribune of Bowling Green, Ohio. She underwent her last cancer treatment and she received a Make-A-Wish trip to Disney World in Orlando, Fl.

But in order to accept the Florida opportunity, both of McKenna’s parents must sign papers from Make-A-Wish. McKenna’s mother, Whitney Hughes, supports the trip, but her father feels that children who are cured shouldn’t receive donations from the foundation.

“I think it should go to kids who only have six months to live,” William told the Sentinel-Tribune.

Susan McConnell, president and CEO of Make-A-Wish for Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana, says McKenna’s trip was cleared by a Foundation doctor and she feels McKenna deserves to go on the trip.

McKenna’s parents aren’t married and the girl just received visitation rights to see her father this year. William attended few of his daughter’s doctors appointments, according to the Sentinel-Tribune, but he says that’s because Hughes didn’t want him there.

“I wasn’t allowed to be involved,” William says. “It ticked me off.”

McKenna’s mother thinks William is refusing to sign the papers because he wants to get back at her, but William told the Sentinel-Tribune this isn’t the case.

No matter the father’s intentions, it’s sad that this young cancer survivor is caught between two battling parents.

But there’s hope: McKenna’s mother placed donation jars around Bowling Green and nearby towns inviting locals to help pay for her daughter to go to Disney World. To save money, she plans to drive to Florida but she still needs to raise $3,500 that she doesn’t have.

“She’s really excited,” Hughes told the Sentinel-Tribune. “It’s all she’s talked about for the last three months.”