A report reveals the corporatist practices that Disney has been imposing on Reedy Creek District for more than 50 years
The document, prepared by the Central Florida Tourism Oversight Board, claims that the company granted benefits "akin to bribes" to district employees.
The Walt Disney Company is in serious trouble and not only in the audiovisual field. For more than a year, the company has been at war with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who finally managed to establish a new management body.
The Reedy Creek District (RCID) was replaced by the Central Florida Tourism Oversight Board. One of their first functions was to prepare a report, which they had to present within a year, analyzing the work carried out by the five members responsible for the management of the Reedy Creek District. This document, which was prepared independently, has just been released and reveals the corporatist practices that Disney has engaged in since 1967 when this board was established.
According to the Central Florida Tourism Oversight Board, The Walt Disney Company granted benefits "akin to bribes" to district employees that, giving away, according to Reuters, millions of dollars in tickets, hotel stays, significant discounts and merchandise:
From a city to an amusement park
That's not the worst of it. The board was most concerned with how the company managed to deceive the state of Florida. This claim was made by one of the independent auditors, George Mason Law School professor Donald Kochan. He said, in statements reported by The Daily Wire, that Disney assured Florida that it intended to build a city around a single theme park. It wanted to city to have "affordable housing, transportation, and other community services."
However, Kochan explains that the company "quickly abandoned its city-building pretense." In its place, they built Disney World Resort, a place consisting of several theme parks, four golf courses and dozens of hotels. There were no longer private homes, only accommodation sites with exclusive services for tourists:
FOX News reports that no hospitals and public services were built. Instead, the company continued to expand Disney World Resort, taking advantage of Reedy Creek District's "unchecked":
Disney responds to the accusations
The 80-page report continues to expose the corporatist practices that The Walt Disney Company has carried out over the 53 years it has governed the Reedy Creek District.
The company issued a statement, which was sent to FOX News, saying that the document is "neither objective nor credible" and that the board is nothing more than a new attempt by DeSantis to "punish Disney for exercising its Constitutional right to free speech":