How about eliminating barriers…..for example, at Peter Pan, if you can walk a short distance, they have a way to allow you to use the final part of the regular queue. But there is a very small turnstile that larger people and people with certain mobility issues can’t get through. Removing this turnstile would open that route up to more people, leaving the exit route more available for those that truly need it.
Make it easier for larger guests as well.
Make sure new attractions are designed with accessibility in mind. For example, Mickey and Minnies runaway railway was built from the ground up, but during a ride evacuation, the wheelchairs they are given to use for that can’t fit through some of the doors.
At Disney World, the new Tron coaster was designed where ECVs can’t go through the queue, there is NO excuse for such bad designs in this day and age.
Here’s a no brainer!! Stop putting disabled people in the lightening lane access line! We wait for our return times just be put into another queue when it’s our turn to come back and we’re put into another long line! And I’m wondering what’s the purpose of giving us a return time so we don’t have to stand in line when we return there’s just still alive in there and maybe not be as long because it’s a lightning lane line but those lightning lane lines can be huge and very long and we can’t stand them anyway because they’re too damn long and my daughter can’t stand there and I can’t stand in her place because I have to stay with her because of her condition and I tell them that so they need to get us a different entrance and they just don’t listen and they don’t care.
Comments for Disneyland Finally Listens to Disabled Guests
Chris
How about eliminating barriers…..for example, at Peter Pan, if you can walk a short distance, they have a way to allow you to use the final part of the regular queue. But there is a very small turnstile that larger people and people with certain mobility issues can’t get through. Removing this turnstile would open that route up to more people, leaving the exit route more available for those that truly need it.
Make it easier for larger guests as well.
Make sure new attractions are designed with accessibility in mind. For example, Mickey and Minnies runaway railway was built from the ground up, but during a ride evacuation, the wheelchairs they are given to use for that can’t fit through some of the doors.
At Disney World, the new Tron coaster was designed where ECVs can’t go through the queue, there is NO excuse for such bad designs in this day and age.
Natasha
Here’s a no brainer!! Stop putting disabled people in the lightening lane access line! We wait for our return times just be put into another queue when it’s our turn to come back and we’re put into another long line! And I’m wondering what’s the purpose of giving us a return time so we don’t have to stand in line when we return there’s just still alive in there and maybe not be as long because it’s a lightning lane line but those lightning lane lines can be huge and very long and we can’t stand them anyway because they’re too damn long and my daughter can’t stand there and I can’t stand in her place because I have to stay with her because of her condition and I tell them that so they need to get us a different entrance and they just don’t listen and they don’t care.
Comments are closed.