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Could Walt Disney World Close Due To Coronavirus? Yes, I Think So. Here’s Why

a stuffed toy mouse with a tissue in his mouth and several red and black cells

Coronavirus is, of course all over the media. And with good reason. It’s a new virus to us, it’s spreading quickly, no one has immunity, we don’t have a vaccine and a certain percentage of people are dying from it.

In an effort to slow the spread of the virus, China and Italy have quarantined millions of people in their respective countries. Airlines are canceling flights left and right (this is, of course, partially to protect people, but also to save money due to numerous cancellations by would-be passengers), and cruise lines, besides quarantining whole ships that turned out to have people with coronavirus on them, are also canceling some future cruises. Whole companies are telling their employees to work from home. Conventions, concerts, festivals and large meetings all around the world have been canceled. Large gathering places such as schools, museums, and religious sites have been reported to be temporarily closing their doors.

As Disney park fans will tell you, Tokyo Disneyland, Hong Kong Disneyland, and Shanghai Disneyland are all closed. Disneyland Paris and Disneyland remain open at this time. For now.

But they wouldn’t ever close Walt Disney World, right?

Unfortunately, I think they could. Here’s why.

Disney has published a “Disney Parks and Resorts Questions about Coronavirus/COVID-19” page on their website, as well as a FAQ about their parks in relation to COVID-19. These documents stress training and retraining of their cast members, as well as sanitation and cleaning practices. They’re obviously doing as much as they can to make sure WDW remains as germ-free as possible.

However viruses, besides face to hands to surface to hands to face, are also spread by airborne droplets. Coughing. Sneezing.

True, most people cover their nose/mouth when that happens. But if you cough or sneeze into your arm, it’s not an airtight seal. So droplets are still getting into the air. Little kids don’t know to cover their mouths and noses. And some people just turn away when they sneeze, hands/arms free, aim their faces down, and let it blast into the air.

Then you have what theme parks are famous for – queues. Indoor queues. With lots of people in an enclosed space for minutes to hours, depending on the ride. Think of the above, plus people who inadvertently cough/sneeze into their hands and then touch queue railings etc. (cast members can be fastidious but they still can’t clean every part of every railing, doorknob, souvenir someone picked up and put back, etc. 24/7). That’s a whole lot of potential for the virus to spread from person to person, even with amazing cleaning protocol on the part of the parks.

So there’s that.

Obviously, guests who are looking forward to their WDW vacations don’t want the parks to close. Disney stockholders certainly don’t want them to close. And, of course, the Walt Disney Company doesn’t want the parks to close, probably most of all.

I can’t think of anyone who wants the parks to close. But they still could wind up having to close them. Here are some ways I think it could go down:

At a press briefing last week, Vice President Pence was asked if he’d feel comfortable bringing his family to Walt Disney World during the outbreak. He avoided directly answering the question, only saying, “I travel across this country all the time.”

Well, that’s comforting.

WDW has only closed for 7 days in its nearly 50-year history. Six of those days were due to the threat (or aftermath) of hurricanes and the one other time was on September 11, 2001. Those were all times when there was a question if their guests (and employees) could remain safe while at the parks. In the days and weeks and maybe months ahead, WDW may need to make some tough decisions in terms of keeping their parks open or not, in light of the spread of coronavirus.

No one will be happy if the parks close. No one hopes the parks will close. But yes, under the right conditions, I think they could.

I guess we’ll just have to wait and see.

By the way, in case you want to keep track of the virus, the Florida Department of Health has a website where they’re publishing updated stats about COVID-19 in the state. It includes how many confirmed cases there are, how many deaths, info about test results and how many people are being monitored (read: under quarantine), etc.

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This post first appeared on Your Mileage May Vary

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