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

flynnibus

Premium Member
Also, City of Bay Lake now lists the position of City Manager as ‘open’ too.

And both cities show the position of “Building Official” as open. I don’t think this was the case the last time I looked, but I’m not sure.
Considering their total admin budget was like 33k - clearly they didn't have their own fulltime staff before :) Looks like they are adding some
 

Isamar

Well-Known Member
Bay Lake City Council meeting is moved to 3:30pm and Lake Buena Vista City Council meeting is moved to 4pm. Both September 11th.

Thanks for the update. I was able to find the new LBV notice but not Bay Lake. Are you able to point me to where you found this please?
 

DCBaker

Premium Member
Here's a link to the full CFTOD Board of Supervisors package for the upcoming meeting on September 13.


This e-mailed public comment from a Reedy Creek Fire Department retiree was also added as an addendum to the August 23 meeting minutes.

Subject: Annual Disney Park Passes being eliminated from Employee and Retiree Benefits

Good Morning Board Members,

I am only speaking for myself today but am aware of many others who I have served with and spent their careers serving the district for 25, 30 plus years. As required, those who obtained an Annual Pass had to meet the age requirement of 55 prior to retirement in order to keep it. There are many reasons why the staff and retirees of Reedy Creek want to keep there pass but mostly because they spent their Life and Career working for it. The employees and retirees were here serving the District 55 plus years, long before the turmoil between Governor DeSantis and Walt Disney World Co. and should not be unfairly used as pawns or collateral damage as a result of two parties that can’t compromise and meet each other half way on their differences.

Secondly, if there is an annual stipend of $1000 offered in lieu of Annual Passes to District employees in the proposed fiscal year 2024 budget or future budget years, then the retirees deserve the same or equal compensation, as we served, earned, and worked for the same annual pass benefit throughout our careers. I would prefer Board Members use empathy and not rush to eliminate this benefit enjoyed by so many but rather pause, compromise, and evaluate other options in maintaining it.

Sincerely,
Jim Fox
 

James Alucobond

Well-Known Member
... but rather pause, compromise, and evaluate other options ...
Austin Powers Doctor Evil GIF
 

Isamar

Well-Known Member
Here's a link to the full CFTOD Board of Supervisors package for the upcoming meeting on September 13.


This e-mailed public comment from a Reedy Creek Fire Department retiree was also added as an addendum to the August 23 meeting minutes.

Subject: Annual Disney Park Passes being eliminated from Employee and Retiree Benefits

Good Morning Board Members,

I am only speaking for myself today but am aware of many others who I have served with and spent their careers serving the district for 25, 30 plus years. As required, those who obtained an Annual Pass had to meet the age requirement of 55 prior to retirement in order to keep it. There are many reasons why the staff and retirees of Reedy Creek want to keep there pass but mostly because they spent their Life and Career working for it. The employees and retirees were here serving the District 55 plus years, long before the turmoil between Governor DeSantis and Walt Disney World Co. and should not be unfairly used as pawns or collateral damage as a result of two parties that can’t compromise and meet each other half way on their differences.

Secondly, if there is an annual stipend of $1000 offered in lieu of Annual Passes to District employees in the proposed fiscal year 2024 budget or future budget years, then the retirees deserve the same or equal compensation, as we served, earned, and worked for the same annual pass benefit throughout our careers. I would prefer Board Members use empathy and not rush to eliminate this benefit enjoyed by so many but rather pause, compromise, and evaluate other options in maintaining it.

Sincerely,
Jim Fox

Yikes… they attached his email and posted it on their website without redacting his address and contact info.
 

pdude81

Well-Known Member
Yeah, to accuse them of using the pass as a political lever and the retirees as pawns isn't the best way to ask them to "Pause, compromise and consider". He was a firefighter but needed a course in effective writing.
I wonder what the board might do after this persuasive plea?
Benefits are more or less gone already. He wants this letter on the record in hopes that they will get them back from RCID in the future.
 

mmascari

Well-Known Member

lazyboy97o

Well-Known Member

The two documents are embedded on Blog Mickey.

The CFTOD story is that: Disney has unclean hands. Disney maintained absolute control over RCID before the
District replaced RCID as its successor, and Disney is the cause of the Agreements’ invalidity.
“Disney failed to notify Disney about Disney’s deal with Disney” is definitely something and it probably has a decent shot.
 

drnilescrane

Well-Known Member
I'm still scratching my head why Disney would open themselves up to a minor procedural error with the federal motion to amend. Especially when this entire fight is about your alleged prior minor procedural errors?

Disney didn't want the CFTOD to get the press release out first. Nevermind me.
 
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DCBaker

Premium Member
New press release from the CFTOD.

Lake Buena Vista, FL – The Central Florida Tourism Oversight District, today, accepted Disney’s proposal to allow Disney to backtrack on key claims in their federal case. Last week, Disney asked the court to remove these key claims from their lawsuit. The judge denied their motion without prejudice because Disney’s lawyers did not follow legal procedure and forgot to ask the district’s permission to proceed.

After accepting Disney’s proposal, district spokesman Alexei Woltornist released the following statement:

We are pleased that Disney backtracked on these legal claims against the district in their federal case. Disney’s latest legal move puts them in line with the position of what the district has been advocating for months now: that these matters should be decided in state court. We hope this helps expedite justice for the people of Florida.

Here is Disney's filing via the CFTOD.
 

mikejs78

Well-Known Member

The two documents are embedded on Blog Mickey.

The CFTOD story is that: Disney has unclean hands. Disney maintained absolute control over RCID before the
District replaced RCID as its successor, and Disney is the cause of the Agreements’ invalidity.
I wonder if the FL judge is sorry she didn't just dismiss the case. The way I see it -

  • I don't think any judge would accept the argument of unclean hands on its face. That would have to be a finding of fact proven at trial.
  • I still don't see how any judge grants CFTOD standing in this case regarding their claims. Disney's counter-claims on the other hand...
 

lazyboy97o

Well-Known Member
I wonder if the FL judge is sorry she didn't just dismiss the case. The way I see it -

  • I don't think any judge would accept the argument of unclean hands on its face. That would have to be a finding of fact proven at trial.
  • I still don't see how any judge grants CFTOD standing in this case regarding their claims. Disney's counter-claims on the other hand...
I understand the technical reason why they didn’t, but given the already stated desire to rule on the hypothetical, I don’t really understand why Disney didn’t more clearly argue that the Reedy Creek Improvement District followed its own unique rules and nobody with actual standing has come forward. I’m not sure the lack of standing will matter too much now.
 

drnilescrane

Well-Known Member
I understand the technical reason why they didn’t, but given the already stated desire to rule on the hypothetical, I don’t really understand why Disney didn’t more clearly argue that the Reedy Creek Improvement District followed its own unique rules and nobody with actual standing has come forward. I’m not sure the lack of standing will matter too much now.
If I had to be cynical, it's because Disney really doesn't care about the development agreements. They're trying to string this out while they litigate the real battle.
 

mikejs78

Well-Known Member
nobody with actual standing has come forward. I’m not sure the lack of standing will matter too much now.

Disney's argument for each of CFTOD's claims is lack of standing (this was after the judge ruled against the motion to dismiss, which was argued on different grounds).

The difference of rules only matters if the district has standing, which Disney is arguing right now that it doesn't. What helps Disney's case is the enabling legislation that states that CFTOD and RCID are effectively the same entity, just with a new management structure.
 

Stripes

Premium Member
I hadn’t seen this document before. This is Disney‘s Opposition to CFTOD Defendants‘ Motion to Abstain or Dismiss. In this document, Disney provides arguments against the findings in the CFTOD Legislative Declaration, including that certain Florida Statutes that CFTOD raised did not apply to the district. See page 27.

Cc: @lazyboy97o
 

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