Judge rules that Disney is not bound by statute requiring it to pay specific minimum wage

A judge has ruled that Disney and its contractors aren’t bound by guidelines set forth by a ballot measure from 2018 that would have made the House of Mouse increase Cast Members’ pay to a minimum of $18 per hour by next year.

The ruling comes amid outcry from Disneyland Cast Members and their unions demanding higher pay and a “living wage,” in addition to better benefits. The unions representing Cast Members at Disney’s first theme park have backed an initiative that required businesses who receive subsidies from the City of Anaheim, California, to raise the minimum wage of their workers to a minimum of $15 per hour by two years ago, and then to increase that pay by at least $1 per hour to $18 per hour by the year 2022.

That initiative was voted on and passed in November three years ago. But in 2019, because Disney didn’t adhere to the new measure, Cast Members sued the entertainment giant for failure to comply with the approved measure.

Last Friday, Judge William D. Claster, an Orange County Superior Court magistrate ruled that even though Disney had benefitted from arrangements made in 1996 with the City of Anaheim, those particular arrangements aren’t the equivalent of a tax rebate or a subsidy from the City of Anaheim, such as the ones described in the approved ballot measure. The 1996 arrangements called for hotel taxes to be used to pay the debt owed on a parking structure that is used by Guests of the Disneyland Resort.

mickey at disneyland

It’s no secret that just before the ballot measure was to be voted on, Disney canceled incentive agreements it had with the City of Anaheim. Those incentives would have amounted to hundreds of millions of dollars in hotel room taxes that would have been used to build an upscale hotel.

Mike Lyster, spokesman for the City of Anaheim said, “While we never want to see a dispute like this play out in court, we appreciate the judge’s determination. It validates what we already knew and have said: [that] the City of Anaheim does not provide any rebate or subsidy to Disney.”

Walt Disney World Cast Members Receive Minimum Wage Increase

It’s an exciting time to be at Walt Disney World! Disney has recently kicked off their big 50th Anniversary celebration called “The World’s Most Magical Celebration”, honoring 50 years of magic. As Disney pulls themselves out of the COVID pandemic phased reopenings and invites Guests to join them in the Parks for the 50th experience, the need for more Cast Members is of the utmost importance. Disney Parks Blog recently shared the news that “Walt Disney World Resort is proud to have returned more than 50,000 Cast Members to work. Now, more than 65,000 are working across the Resort, and we are hiring hundreds more each week as we continue to open more resorts and Guest locations.” The massive hiring and re-hiring is the reason Disney Park entertainment is making a comeback with new announcements like the soon-to-be returning Candlelight Processional at EPCOT, Indiana Jones Stunt Spectacular at Disney’s Hollywood Studios, and even the October 1 return of favorites like “Let the Magic Begin” at Magic Kingdom Park. Now, Disney Cast Members have even more to celebrate, as they receive a minimum wage increase!

As reported by OrlandoSentinel: “Disney and its unions agreed in 2014 to increase the minimum salary from $8.03 to $10 an hour by 2016. In 2017, the Service Trades Council Union — Disney’s largest — engaged in negotiations for another increase, and in September 2018 union workers approved the most recent contract that raised the minimum to $11 that December and outlined the path to $15.” Now, reports show that the Service Trades Council Union, a coalition of local unions representing Disney workers, struck a deal with the company to gradually increase wages to $15 an hour by October 1, 2021.

Currently, both Walt Disney World employees, as well as Universal employees, are now receiving increasing wages of $15 an hour. OrlandoSentinel reports that with this increase “Florida’s minimum wage rising to the same level by 2026 — many workers are experiencing new economic mobility, potentially signaling a positive shift in Central Florida’s low-wage, tourism-dependent economy.”

As crowds continue to return to the Orlando Theme Park, Disney plans to continue to hire Cast Members at this higher wage through the end of the year at a rate of hundreds of new employees weekly.