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Universal takes first steps reviving Orlando theme park biz

Walt Disney World welcomes guests back in July

ORLANDO, Fla. – With masks on their faces and temperature checks at entrances, Harry Potter fans and roller coaster lovers streamed back into Universal Orlando Resort this week in one of the first major steps toward reviving Florida’s theme park industry, which was left temporarily moribund by closures to stop the spread of the new coronavirus.

Matt Fischer traveled from North Carolina with his family and visited the theme park Friday.

“We actually came down to Orlando to visit friends and found out this was opening the same weekend we were coming down, so we figured we’d come in,” Fischer said.

Universal Orlando became the first of Orlando’s major theme park resorts to reopen by allowing annual pass-holders to return to its three parks Wednesday and Thursday. It opened to the general public Friday for the first time since mid-March.

“We missed the parks desperately!" said Donna Walters, who wore a pink scarf over her mouth and nose Wednesday after walking past a security checkpoint where a guard took her temperature with a thermometer gun.

If her temperature had been 100.4 degrees (38 degrees Celsius) or greater, she would have been barred from entry under new virus-related procedures adapted by Universal Orlando and the area’s other theme parks.

Fisher told News 6 what he plans to do to stay safe while inside the theme park.

“Just keep our distance. Try not to get too close to everybody and just give everybody their own space.”

The number of people allowed in was restricted to allow for social distancing, blue circles on the ground showed visitors where to stand to maintain 6-feet (2 meters) distance and a recording in English and Spanish played in a loop over loudspeakers at the entrance reminding park-goers to wear face masks and keep their distance.

“Good safety precautions. Everything seems to be hopefully coming back to normal here soon, but you never know,” Fischer added. “We’re not all back to work yet and everything’s not back open yet in North Carolina, but it’s starting to be. It’s nice to be able to get out and do something.”

Workers with spray bottles and cloths wiped down the handrails of flat-escalators leading into the parks and Citywalk, the resort’s restaurant-entertainment complex that has been open for more than two weeks.

Amy Donate, from Jacksonville, said her and her family weren’t worried when visiting the park.

“For us, we’re not super concerned. We’re all very healthy in our family. No one has any medical conditions that we’re worried about,” Donate said. “I think they’re doing what’s necessary. Certainly, we wish that we didn’t have to wear masks all day.”

Crosstown rival SeaWorld Orlando is set to reopen next week, as are two other SeaWorld-owned parks in Tampa, Busch Gardens Tampa Bay and Adventure Island.

Walt Disney World plans to welcome back visitors next month to its parks, and thousands of workers could start being recalled for work starting in mid-June, according to Unite Here Local 362.

Disney has not made any plans to reopen the water parks, and those workers can transfer temporarily into other departments. College students and international workers who staffed the country pavilions at Epcot’s World Showcase aren’t coming back anytime soon, so the positions formally staffed by international workers will be worked by U.S. employees, Eric Clinton, the local union’s president told members recently during an online meeting posted to Facebook.

Also disappearing for the time being will be parades, firework shows, “meet-and-greets” with performers dressed as Disney characters and the courtesy of using a guests’ phone to take their photo, Clinton said.

“Any scenario that could create large crowds ... the company isn’t going to do it,” Clinton said.

All of Florida’s theme parks temporarily closed this spring, and Floridians and theme parks fans across the U.S. were forced to stay home because of state and local lockdown orders meant to stop the virus’s spread. The smaller Legoland Florida Resort in Winter Haven, Florida, opened Monday.

As of Thursday, Florida had more than 60,000 total coronavirus cases and more than 2,600 related deaths, but the number of cases has been trending upward. Over the past two weeks, the rolling average number of daily new cases has increased by 151.6 cases, an increase of almost 21%, according to a tally kept by Johns Hopkins University.

Orlando’s theme park industry, and synergistic businesses like hotels and restaurants, were devastated by the coronavirus-related closures. Tens of thousands of workers were furloughed and the theme park resorts have lost hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue. Orange County Comptroller Phil Diamond on Wednesday reported that the county’s tax collections on hotels and vacation rentals in April dropped 97% from the same month in 2019 to a level not seen since 1980.

But Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings said he was confident tax collections will improve as the theme parks reopen.

“I believe that we will recover," Demings said at a news conference.

On Thursday, the U.S. Department of Labor reported that more than 206,000 Floridians filed jobless claims last week, up from 175,000 claims the prior week. More than 2 million Floridians have filed jobless claims since mid-March.

With the reopening of the parks, “thousands and thousands of employees have been put back to work," said Tom Williams, CEO of Universal Parks & Resorts.

After arriving at Universal Orlando, Ashley Gonzalez tried to go on as many rides as possible, though wait times were longer than usual because of social distancing precautions. Some things felt odd, such as having only one person in a row on the rides and not being able to have personal contact with performers dressed up as characters such as Captain America.

“It’s refreshing to be out here because you spent so much time cooped up and in quarantine. It’s cool to be out in the open,” Gonzalez said. “You’re so used to high-five-ing people, and getting the character meet-and-greets. But you can’t do that now, obviously because of socially distancing."


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