DisneyParker
Member
Coincidentally, I will be at staying at the CSR May 4-7 for the National Conference for Special Education Law. And it's "children with autism" not autistic children": child-first language.
You said "it would be the right thing for Disney to allow autistic children to still use GAC". This entire tread and other threads already closed seem to be focusing on this one medical diagnosis where there is a myriad of other illnesses that affect both children and adults who did and could still benefit from the assistance offered by the old GAC. True autism is a potentially very disabling neurological condition, but so are many other conditions. By constantly limiting the discussion to autistic children and their meltdowns, I fear we risk narrowing the scope of which people should receive some type of assistance.
Coincidentally, I will be at staying at the CSR May 4-7 for the National Conference for Special Education Law. And it's "children with autism" not autistic children": child-first language.
I think the reason this, and the other, threads have been focusing on autism is because the people who are suing Disney are families of children with autism. To my recollection, no other disabilities were mentioned in the paperwork (from what I read). Not that other disabilities are less important, but that's what has driven the focus of these discussions.
The lawsuit...I can see how this could be accepted by an attorney (that's with me knowing some of the laws, even though this is not my area). When I was going through college I worked with a daycare. The children were all developmentally delayed. I eventually became a one on one teacher to a disabled little boy who had been diagnosed with autism. Do I think autistic children should get the card? Yes. After working with my one on one, these children could definitely benefit from having access. Some children can be functioning, but others.....not so much. Disney does need to look more into the disability.
Ok sorry I wrote a book there....
That is exactly the point. This one group (16 families seeking an unspecified amount of monetary damages) has filed a knee jerk lawsuit and created a national discussion almost solely about their cause. A more well thought out approach involving support groups of additional disabilities may have carried more weight in a court challenge.
You said "it would be the right thing for Disney to allow autistic children to still use GAC". This entire tread and other threads already closed seem to be focusing on this one medical diagnosis where there is a myriad of other illnesses that affect both children and adults who did and could still benefit from the assistance offered by the old GAC. True autism is a potentially very disabling neurological condition, but so are many other conditions. By constantly limiting the discussion to autistic children and their meltdowns, I fear we risk narrowing the scope of which people should receive some type of assistance.
Coincidentally, I will be at staying at the CSR May 4-7 for the National Conference for Special Education Law. And it's "children with autism" not autistic children": child-first language.
I'm kind of skipping over 7 pages of this thread here, and while this is not directly related to the lawsuit, it is related to why the change was made in the first place. Remember that many (most?) attractions began to track GAC usage months before the switch over to the DAS, and many tracked the DAS use at least for the first few months after its implementation? I used to work at one such attraction, and I think the numbers are quite astounding.
These are the average wait times of Attraction X when GAC was used during Christmas 2012 vs when DAS was used during Christmas of 2013:
12/22/2012 35 12/22/2013 31
12/23/2012 43 12/23/2013 26
12/24/2012 45 12/24/2013 27
12/25/2012 41 12/25/2013 31
12/26/2012 24 12/26/2013 28
12/27/2012 62 12/27/2013 39
12/28/2012 67 12/28/2013 37
12/29/2012 41 12/29/2013 30
12/30/2012 80 12/30/2013 60
12/31/2012 53 12/31/2013 36
1/1/2013 51 1/1/2014 29
As you can see, every day except for one day saw (mostly) significantly decreased average wait times compared to the year before except for 12/26; however, in 2012, that day saw 1150 GAC users whereas in 2013, that day saw only 450, so obviously other variables were at play there (one being a significant increase in the number of "No Strings" received compared to the previous year). Also, the 27th saw over 2500 GAC users in 2012, and 550 DAS users in 2013!
Hopefully one argument Disney will make in this lawsuit is that the DAS passes have made wait times less for EVERYONE, including actual DAS users. Yes, the numbers here are standby wait times, but in order to have lower standby wait times, you also need lower fastpass wait times!
Thanks. I'd rather not say which attraction it was, just because I don't know who reads these forums and I'd rather stay anonymous. But it is considered an E ticket attraction. Remember, those were average wait times over the course of a whole day. I know - still not as high as you'd expect for an E ticket during Christmas, but if you think about how that could be possible, you could probably figure it out.
Anyway, the numbers were collected by the person as the merge point. They had one of those hand counters, and every time someone showed a GAC, they counted the number of people coming through on that particular GAC. If it said 6, but only 4 were riding, they would count 4. If it said 6 and 8 came through, they would count 8.
Absolutely! But when referring in generalities and to a group of people whose identities are unknown, conventional usage calls for person-first language. Hooray for your son for being an advocate for himself!This is actually a hot button topic in the community.
https://autisticadvocacy.org/identity-first-language/
I am a social worker, so I understand the intention behind the person first language. However, I think it needs to be recognized that there are people on the spectrum who prefer identifying themselves as "autistic." My son calls himself an "Aspie" and I will always advocate for his desire to identity himself whatever he feels is appropriate.
Not MK!Can you say which theme park?
Yes, it is one of the four parks at WDW (but not MK). I'm not trying to being coy or difficult or anything, I just don't know if I could get in trouble!Is it at WDW?
Not sure what you mean by extra slots.
I believe FP+ wasn't rolled out to all onsite guests until October 2013, the same month Disney cut over to DAS. Before that FP+ was in limited test.
I think you may have misinterpreted my statement. I'm not saying people shouldn't take autistic children. Not at all.
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