California Health Secretary Mark Ghaly said theme parks with a
capacity of more than 15,000 visitors must wait to resume
business until a county's COVID-19 risk level drops to the
lowest tier of "minimal" spread.
Under California's four-tier scheme, the lowest tier means daily
cases of the coronavirus must number less than one per 100,000.
The decision affects not just Disneyland but Comcast Corp's
Universal Studios, Legoland and Knott's Berry Farm, which all
closed down in mid-March.
"These State guidelines will keep us shuttered for the
foreseeable future," Ken Potrock, the Disneyland resort's
president, said in a statement.
Kurt Stocks, president of Legoland California, said the state's
actions so far "have cost tens of thousands of jobs across the
industry, and today’s announcement will all but confirm that
thousands more will be lost."
Disneyland is the only Disney park that remains closed amid the
pandemic. The company has reopened resorts in Florida, China,
Hong Kong and Tokyo with attendance limits and other safeguards.
Ghaly acknowledged that a reopening date for Disneyland, in
Orange County, could be far off. Most Southern California
counties are stuck in the top two tiers.
"I don't know when Orange County will enter the yellow (minimal)
tier," Ghaly told a news briefing. "We do believe that it is
possible. It will require a lot of work, a lot of vigilance," he
said, citing strict social distancing, testing and mask use by
the general public.
The delay follows months of appeals by Disney executives for the
parks to reopen. Disney said in September it was laying off
28,000 employees from its theme parks, and laid part of the
blame on California's unwillingness to allow the parks to
reopen.
Karen Irwin, president of Universal Studios, said in a statement
that the California decision meant the park in Hollywood would
be unlikely to reopen until well into 2021.
The California Attractions and Parks Association called the
directive a "Keep Theme Parks Closed Indefinitely" plan that
would lead to more job losses.
Ghaly announced on Tuesday less restrictive guidelines for
smaller theme parks, which will be allowed to open at 25%
reduced capacity once the counties in which they are located
reach the "moderate" spread level.
He said health officials were concerned about the potential for
random mixing at larger theme parks that draw visitors from many
areas of the country and have indoor attractions and eating
facilities.
(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; Additional reporting by Jill
Serjeant; Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Peter Cooney)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|