Menu

Disney World Cast Members Reportedly Forced Out of Florida

Flamingo Crossings Cast Members Housing
Credit: Disney

Disney World cast members find themselves being squeezed on all sides. Last year, they fought for and won a raise to $18 an hour, but while that was happening, prices for rent and food exploded in Central Florida.

The average rent in Central Florida is $400 more than the national average, which costs cast members $1,900 a month. A Disney World cast member making $18 an hour, working 40 hours a week, would make $37,440 a year before taxes.

Disney Cast Members Rally

Credit: Spectrum News 13 Orlando

Rent in Central Florida would cost that same cast member $22,800 a year or 61 percent of their base salary. This inability to afford rent is what has caused as many as one in five Walt Disney World cast members to be homeless.

But with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signing a law that bans homeless encampments and with limited funds, Disney World cast members find themselves with limited options for living in Central Florida.

The new law signed by the governor makes it illegal for these homeless cast members to sleep on public property and allows police to move them away forcibly. However, it does nothing to create affordable housing options for them.

Walt Disney World does have a plan to offer these cast members, who do work full-time, affordable housing in the area with 1,000 units available at a lower cost, but that plan has run into headwinds as residents rally against the proposed housing project.

Disney World affordable housing development

Credit: Disney

The proposed project near the Flamingo Crossings Town Center sits on 80 acres and would include 1,400 units, including 1,000 units of affordable housing.

However, neighbors rallied against the affordable housing complex, complaining that the proposal would increase traffic in an already congested area and overwhelm the school system. The neighbors took their complaints to the Orange County Commission, which is set to vote on moving the project forward or sending it back to developers to make changes to the plans.

Alex Cabrera, whose home is less than two miles away, told the Orlando Sentinel: 

My family and I, we moved here, after an exhaustive research, knowing full well that Disney would be our neighbor. We just never thought they’d be bad neighbors. They’re trying to pack an enormous amount of density into what is essentially the size of a Costco parking lot. It’s just way too much.

To help combat the rush into Orange County schools, Disney agreed to open the new affordable housing development in phases not to overwhelm the schools. The Walt Disney Company also agreed to pay developer fees for infrastructure projects in Orange County.

Cast Members fired not culturally authentic

Credit: Disney

The Walt Disney World Resort does not just back the project, but the Flamingo Crossing project is also supported by Habitat for Humanity of Greater Orlando and the Orange County Classroom Teachers Association, who said that this affordable housing project will benefit its members who struggle to find attainable housing.

But while this affordable housing project makes its way through the approval process, Walt Disney World Resort cast members cannot afford to live in Central Florida but cannot be homeless there either. It is a no-win situation for these people who make Disney World a special place.

What do you think of Disney World cast members being unable to find affordable housing in Central Florida? Let us know in the comments.

This post Disney World Cast Members Reportedly Forced Out of Florida appeared first on Disney Fanatic.

About Rick Lye

Rick is an avid Disney fan. He first went to Disney World in 1986 with his parents and has been hooked ever since. Rick is married to another Disney fan and is in the process of turning his two children into fans as well. When he is not creating new Disney adventures, he loves to watch the New York Yankees and hang out with his dog, Buster. In the fall, you will catch him cheering for his beloved NY Giants.

4 comments

  1. Sharon Van Nostrand

    The Governor needs to get rent cost under control. Why are rents in Florida $400 more than any other place in the country. Between high rents, high cost of property insurance, etc. it’s getting impossible to live in Florida. I understand the need to get the homeless off the streets but if they are passing this type of legislation then they need to provide financial resources and maybe lost cost housing. They cannot leave it to each municipality to cover the cost. This Governor and legislature have to stop passing legislation and running. Then need to provide solutions.

  2. Disney should pay cast members higher wages.

  3. The very same people objecting to this project are likely frequent visitors to WDW. Our nation was not built on NIMBY attitudes.

  4. Florida is being marketed as home for millionaires and billionaires. However the people building those mansions can not afford to live here. Neither can most working people. Daytona Beach just had big hearing about this. Just to rent a two bedroom apartment requires $60,000 a year income! And buying a house? Just like at Disney, many working people are now homeless or at threat of homelessness. Insurance is required if you have a mortgage and insurance is outrageous .

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.