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Is Disney moving employees to Florida?

Disney scraps plans for new Florida campus, mass employee relocation amid DeSantis feud. Disney will no longer be moving forward with the construction of its Lake Nona, Florida, employee campus. The company will also no longer be requiring California-based employees to relocate.



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Disney has scrapped plans to build a near $1bn (£804m) corporate campus for 2,000 employees in Florida, amid an increasingly bitter political and legal battle with the state's governor, Ron DeSantis, over the future of the entertainment giant's theme parks.

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The Burbank entertainment giant had planned to relocate 2,000 jobs — mostly from California — to a sprawling office complex near Orlando International Airport, which serves as a tourist portal to Walt Disney World. Executives explained the move by touting Florida's business-friendly policies.

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Disney has scrapped plans to build a near $1bn (£804m) corporate campus for 2,000 employees in Florida, amid an increasingly bitter political and legal battle with the state's governor, Ron DeSantis, over the future of the entertainment giant's theme parks.

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The Walt Disney Company plans to relocate about 2000 jobs from California to Orlando's Lake Nona community. On June 16, 2022, Disney said the timeline to move its employees to Lake Nona would be delayed from 2022 until 2026.

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Earlier this year, Disney said it would slash 7,000 jobs from its workforce as part of a larger reorganization of the company that will see it cut costs by $5.5 billion. The announcement was made during Bob Iger's first earnings call since returning as CEO.

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While Disney could pick up and move some of its businesses from Orlando to another state, Disney World and its other theme parks aren't going anywhere. Moving all the infrastructure, including hotels, restaurants and shops as well as transportation to move guests around, just wouldn't be feasible.

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It would certainly hurt the state of Florida. The government would lose all the tax revenue. People who work at Disney would lose their jobs. There are many companies that only exist because of Disney or that get a lot of their business because of Disney, like hotels near the park.

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Company cited new leadership and changing business conditions, a memo said. Disney announced Thursday that it canceled plans for a new campus near Orlando, Florida.

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Summary. Walt Disney's decision to scrap a proposed $900 million office park in Orlando, Fla., creates a 60-acre hole inside an 11,000-acre master planned community, clouding the near-term future of many other real-estate projects already under way there.

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In his email to Disney cast members, D'Amaro cited “changing business conditions” as a reason for canceling the Lake Nona project. According to the New York Times article, “About 200 Disney employees already relocated to Florida from California.

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nope. Honestly, this is a rumor that has spread multiple times in the Disney space, so we wanted to debunk the rumor. Disney is not planning to make a move to Texas or to build a theme park in Texas anytime soon.

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Disney can't move While facilities such as factories can easily be moved, Walt Disney's World's sprawling, 27,520 acres made up of brick-and-mortar hotels, rides, stages, shops, and restaurants, is simply too vast, he said. The costs of building the new infrastructure would be astronomical.

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Disney failed to achieve a top-three ranking in 2020, which was likely a result of its controversial decision to air films originally planned for theatrical release on its streaming service, Disney+.

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Meanwhile, guests of Deluxe Resorts and Deluxe Villas can take advantage of Extended Evening Hours on select dates at select parks. In 2024, Disney will introduce new good-to-go days that will allow Disney annual passholders and cast members to visit the theme parks without a theme park reservation.

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