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Bill filed to replace Disney's Reedy Creek with district run by governor's appointees

Photo: Pixabay
Photo: Pixabay

A Republican bill filed Monday would hand the reins of Walt Disney World's Reedy Creek Improvement District in Central Florida to a board appointed by the governor and confirmed by the Senate.

Rep. Fred Hawkins of St. Cloud filed House Bill 9B as the two-week legislative special session got underway.

Under the bill, Gov. Ron DeSantis will appoint a board of five people to take over the roads, drainage, utilities, fire protection, building codes and bond financing that Walt Disney World built through a special district established by the Legislature in 1967.

DeSantis had promised to cancel Disney’s "corporate kingdom" after the company spoke out against a bill banning instruction about LGBTQ people in early grades.

The bill would make sure the district, a government entity, continues to pay its more than $900 million of long-term debt.

UCF political science professor Aubrey Jewett says the new Central Florida Tourism Oversight District would maintain the infrastructure and services for tourists coming to Disney World.

"The big difference will be that the governing board of this newly named district will be appointed by the governor and not Disney, and thus they may not always have  Disney's best interest at heart," he said.

Jewett says it gives DeSantis and the Legislature a way to "try to keep Disney under their thumb."

GOP leaders say Disney should not get special treatment as a government unto itself.

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