Florida governor signs bill stripping Disney of self-governing authority
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[April 23, 2022]
By Maria Caspani and Dawn Chmielewski
(Reuters) - Florida Governor Ron DeSantis
on Friday signed a bill that strips Walt Disney Co of self-governing
authority at its Orlando-area parks in retaliation for its opposition to
a new law that limits the teaching of LGBTQ issues in schools.
The Republican-controlled legislature on Thursday approved the bill,
which will eliminate the special governing jurisdiction that allows the
company to operate Walt Disney World Resort as its own city. Within the
25,000-acre tract, it operates four theme parks, two water parks and 175
miles of roadway.
Disney's special status "was really an aberration," DeSantis said at a
news conference where he signed the bill into law. "No individual or no
company in Florida is treated this way."
Disney did not immediately comment on the bill's signing.
While the financial impact on the company and the state is uncertain,
the change could alter how Disney operates its sprawling Central Florida
empire and sour the close relationship it has enjoyed with the state for
more than 50 years.
The governor on Friday said Disney would pay more taxes as a result of
the law but did not elaborate.
DeSantis is a potential 2024 Republican presidential candidate who has
courted conservative voters on issues such as immigration, abortion and
LGBTQ rights.
With his latest move against Disney, DeSantis is attempting to burnish
his conservative credentials by showing he is willing to stand up to
what he described as a "woke" company based in California that does not
share Florida's values.
Disney initially did not publicly oppose the LGBTQ legislation last
month, prompting criticism from that community and some employees. The
company later condemned the law and said it would suspend political
donations in Florida pending a review.
The law, dubbed the "don't say gay" bill by critics, bans classroom
instruction on sexual orientation or gender identity for children in
kindergarten through third grade. DeSantis backed the measure, saying it
would give parents more control over their children's education.
Opponents call it a thinly veiled attempt to marginalize gay and
transgender students, or the children of queer parents.
At a fundraiser in Seattle on Thursday, President Joe Biden weighed in
on the clash between Disney and Florida Republicans. He said efforts to
impose such constraints "have nothing to do with traditional
conservative doctrine."
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Security officers staff the entrance at the Walt Disney World's
Magic Kingdom in Orlando, Florida, U.S. June 13, 2016.
REUTERS/Barbara Liston/File Photo
"I respect conservatives. There's
nothing conservative about deciding you're going to throw Disney out
of its present posture because Mickey Mouse ... should ... not be
able to say, you know, gay."
While the bill appears to be an attack on Disney and sprawling
Orlando theme parks, experts say the financial impact of the
legislation on the company and the state is unclear at this stage.
DeSantis rushed the bill through the statehouse, pushing it through
within three days of a special session, but it will not take effect
until June 2023, giving the two sides time to adjust to the new
reality.
The law dissolves the Reedy Creek Improvement District, which was
created in the 1960s to lure Disney World to the state, after the
much smaller Disneyland had become a hit theme park in California.
For more than half a century the district has enabled Disney to
function like a county government, providing services such as
fire-fighting, power, water and roads within Orange and Osceola
counties. In turn Disney can issue bonds with tax advantages to pay
for improvements.
Disney is a major political contributor in the state. In the 2020
election cycle, the company donated $4.8 million in total, including
campaign funds to more than 100 individual Florida legislative
members, some of whom sponsored Thursday’s legislation, state
records show.
It is unclear if the state or the company will be harmed most now
that the bill has become law.
The Walt Disney Resort paid $780.3 million in state and local taxes
in 2021, according to a fact sheet commemorating the 50th
anniversary of the theme park. Orange County Tax Collector Scott
Randolph said the legislation will punish local taxpayers more than
Disney.
(Reporting by Maria Caspani in New York and Dawn Chmielewski in Los
Angeles; Writing by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and
Matthew Lewis)
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