While I know there is certainly abuse, I truly believe the majority of the reason the program is breaking is because legitimately disabled individuals are receiving the wrong type of accommodations.
I jive with what
@SplashJacket said about DAS being turned into a make a wish pass. I wish every disabled person could have a make a wish experience every visit, but it’s just not possible. The system has broken.
DAS should be the exclusive purview of moderate-severe cognitive impairments, largely in children, who mentally cannot tolerate the experience of waiting. Not ADHD, not anxiety, not ‘sensory issues’. Yes, mostly ‘autism’, but not autism without still a concrete moderate to severe impairment of function. Not high functioning autism, most certainly not solo AP visiting adults with autism who want to lap their favourite ride.
For the myriad of many, many legitimate disabilities, the long term solution would be an air conditioned rider swap esque lounge in all the major attractions, with chairs, water, bathrooms, etc. A place near the merge point that they can join their party from the standby line/LL merge point. If they are solo, their time can be quite easily tracked by the flow through of those intermittent red tracking passes the CM’s handout to regular standby guests. Or same for one adult/friend to accompany their child/friend if they happen to not have a larger party.
That would properly accommodate all but neurocognitive disabilities quite well. For whom the Make a Wish DAS seems like it works well for. Those families also truly cannot tolerate long park days to begin with. So I’d happily think they can cluster a bunch of rides as they’ll probably still ride less than the average guest.
But that requires lots and lots and lots of money. They need to start designing their new major attractions though with space consideration for such a function.