News Reedy Creek Improvement District and the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District

LAKid53

Official Member of the Girly Girl Fan Club
Premium Member
I would suspect Disney continues to do their own internal inspections which will likely be more thorough than a state inspection anyway and the state inspections are just added bureaucracy and a waste of time and money.…..which I guess is the point.

Edit: from a quick web search it appears pool inspections fall under the Florida Department of Health in each County so I suppose that means mostly Orange and a little Osceola counties.

Correct. County health departments already overwhelmed by other responsibilities. And no budget to take on the extra task.
 

LAKid53

Official Member of the Girly Girl Fan Club
Premium Member
There were fees associated with the pool permits and their renewal, so I’m not sure much would be saved.

According to the fee schedule, between $125 and $250 per pool.

 

mikejs78

Well-Known Member
Which won't be as thorough as what RCID was doing. The state agency responsible will be the Florida Department of Health. I imagine the burden will fall on the county health department.
Honestly the change was supposedly made on the 29th, which was after the news came out about the development deal.. My guess is this is a way to try to cause Disney pain. Shut down pools.
 

flynnibus

Premium Member
So does that mean the counties are picking up the extra tab to inspect Disneys pools?
No - this is a normal customer pays situation.

People are reading WAY TOO MUCH into this. AFAIK RCID didn't do any of the health inspections previously. I think this single comment from an article is more about regulations that maybe Disney's deal didn't include.
 

GoofGoof

Premium Member
Correct. County health departments already overwhelmed by other responsibilities. And no budget to take on the extra task.
So does that mean the counties are picking up the extra tab to inspect Disneys pools?
From what I could find the inspections are done twice a year. Disney has 30+ resorts including DVC and most have multiple pools so I would guess maybe 70-100 total pools to inspect times 2 for twice a year so 140-200 inspections a year. My guess is a single inspector could cover more than one pool in a day but who knows. Even if he did 3 pools a day that’s still 12 work weeks of extra work so 1/4 a full time worker (FTE) added. If he could only cover 1 pool a day then about 1 FTE. so in the grand scheme of things not a huge extra cost to the counties but it isn’t nothing either.
 

castlecake2.0

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
No - this is a normal customer pays situation.

People are reading WAY TOO MUCH into this. AFAIK RCID didn't do any of the health inspections previously. I think this single comment from an article is more about regulations that maybe Disney's deal didn't include.
Makes sense, thanks!
 

flynnibus

Premium Member
I would suspect Disney continues to do their own internal inspections which will likely be more thorough than a state inspection anyway and the state inspections are just added bureaucracy and a waste of time and money.…..which I guess is the point.
Pools - especially public ones... have regulations applied to them for health code, safety, building, and chemical storage/use.

People run their facilities day to day, but face oversight, even after a facility is opened. Just like your building elevators get inspected periodically, etc.

This is not so new unknown burden to the county - this is just some new customers. But like I said in another post, I don't think RCID was doing the majority of this anyway... their charter doesn't get into health code AFAIK.
 

LAKid53

Official Member of the Girly Girl Fan Club
Premium Member
If RCID was allowed to conduct the inspection of all pools on WDW property and the new district no longer has the authority, you've just added 50-60 pools to the list. And I believe its a semiannual inspection.
 

LAKid53

Official Member of the Girly Girl Fan Club
Premium Member
From what I could find the inspections are done twice a year. Disney has 30+ resorts including DVC and most have multiple pools so I would guess maybe 70-100 total pools to inspect times 2 for twice a year so 140-200 inspections a year. My guess is a single inspector could cover more than one pool in a day but who knows. Even if he did 3 pools a day that’s still 12 work weeks of extra work so 1/4 a full time worker (FTE) added. If he could only cover 1 pool a day then about 1 FTE. so in the grand scheme of things not a huge extra cost to the counties but it isn’t nothing either.

County health departments are part of FLDOH, not the county. And the inspectors handle more than just pools.
 

GoofGoof

Premium Member
Pools - especially public ones... have regulations applied to them for health code, safety, building, and chemical storage/use.

People run their facilities day to day, but face oversight, even after a facility is opened. Just like your building elevators get inspected periodically, etc.

This is not so new unknown burden to the county - this is just some new customers. But like I said in another post, I don't think RCID was doing the majority of this anyway... their charter doesn't get into health code AFAIK.
I think you are probably correct. I also suspect that Disney has a higher standard than the minimum required by the department of health so won’t be an issue either way.
 

drnilescrane

Well-Known Member
If RCID was allowed to conduct the inspection of all pools on WDW property and the new district no longer has the authority, you've just added 50-60 pools to the list. And I believe its a semiannual inspection.
According to the CNN article is more like 600. Every kiddy splash pad and hot tub is a separate pool, and don't forget about the water parks. And it's the entirety of CFTOD f/k/a/ RCID so you have to count Golden Oak and the Four Seasons (public areas are in the district, just the neighborhoods aren't), Hotel Plaza Blvd, etc.
 

LAKid53

Official Member of the Girly Girl Fan Club
Premium Member
No - this is a normal customer pays situation.

People are reading WAY TOO MUCH into this. AFAIK RCID didn't do any of the health inspections previously. I think this single comment from an article is more about regulations that maybe Disney's deal didn't include.

The inspectors are state employees assigned to the county health departments. $125 per pool isn't paying their salaries.
 

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