Good luck to the poor park employees who are going to have to enforce this.
I worked at an amusement park when I was in high school that decided to ban smoking in the park one season and move the designated smoking area outside to the parking lot. I took so much abuse that summer trying to enforce the rules, dealing with upset guests coming in and out of the gates to have a smoke, forgetting items in their lockers and having to walk back, etc. Far more abuse than I took from guests in previous seasons over people smoking in the isolated smoking areas that already existed.
The size of these strollers is incredibly out of hand, to the point there are now these wagon-like things parents take around that are 2x4+ feet for one kid. They were absurd, and the whole "stroller parking" phenomenon at disney is a great example of how out of hand it is.
It's silly that somehow I think removing smoking sections is more frustrating, considering smoking actively harms the public's health - but that's probably showing my own bias as a former regular smoker.
Unfortunately, a lot of those big strollers are still going to be allowed in! "Stroller wagons and strollers over 31 inches wide or 52 inches long won’t be allowed in the parks." So a 2 foot by 4 foot stroller fits by several inches in both dimensions.
> I think removing smoking sections is more frustrating, as it actively harms the public's health
This sentence reads (to me) like removing the smoking sections actively harms the public's health. Did you mean that, or did you mean smoking actively harms the public's health? Or am I somehow reading this wrong?
Poorly written - I just meant that it's silly that I dislike it, considering smoking harms the public's health (and thus removing areas for smoking around others is good for the public)
I wonder to what degree the decrease in smoking rates is caused by education and health awareness and to what degree the decrease in smoking rates is caused by making it inconvenient and socially discouraged to be a smoker.
Wasn't this a Friends episode? Rachel pretends to be a smoker to get 1:1 time with some cool executive?
I suspect smoking, like any hobby, has a social component and making it a PITA will push people to chat at the espresso machine or gluten free granola bar dispenser instead.
I remember reading a paper years and years ago that apparently found that smokers at companies where several of the senior bosses smoked got faster promotions and higher raises than non-smokers.
push people to chat at the espresso machine or gluten free granola bar dispenser instead
The difference is that there is no reason for me to hang around the espresso machine while drinking my espresso and also my office has something like 3 espresso machines on each floor, while all the smokers go to the same spot, so it unlikely that I'll use the same espresso machine as the CEO. And even if I do he has no reason hang around and talk to me. Being 'forced' to stand outside in the cold for 5-10 minutes several times a day causes a different bonding experience,
I have a kid, but I had never known some of these strollers existed before until I went to Disneyland. I’m talking about the wagons and other giant strollers.
I don’t think the large stroller ban will be controversial, since large strollers are inconvenient anyway to the person pushing the stroller.
It is probably to have no more of those six-wide seats across type strollers.
Okay, probably really only three, I've never seen six across actually. But when you encounter them, they take up multiple pedestrian lanes and are difficult to get around.
I wish they'd ban all those scooters. It's like a cottage industry renting out scooters at MCO, hotels and even at the park itself for a bunch of self-entitled weirdo's to ride around in. It's clear they have never need one before in their LIFE b/c they keep running into you at the park or cruising 6 wide down main street (I know some have a legit need, but not that many!). Strollers at DW never bothered me, those scooters however....grrrrr. Oh yea im sure you really need that I see you hop right out of it to get on a ride.
To be fair, walking around 10 miles a day in 95+ degree heat is exhausting for a young healthy person like me. I am frustrated by people's laziness too but they're likely physically incapable of walking that much
I worked at an amusement park when I was in high school that decided to ban smoking in the park one season and move the designated smoking area outside to the parking lot. I took so much abuse that summer trying to enforce the rules, dealing with upset guests coming in and out of the gates to have a smoke, forgetting items in their lockers and having to walk back, etc. Far more abuse than I took from guests in previous seasons over people smoking in the isolated smoking areas that already existed.