Skift Take

The happiest place on Earth is a place of mixed emotions right now.

Florida confirmed its place as an emerging epicenter of the Covid-19 pandemic in the United States on Friday by reporting its second sharpest daily rise in cases, while Walt Disney Co. prepared to reopen its flagship theme park in Orlando to the chagrin of some employees.

Florida recorded 11,433 new coronavirus cases, the state health department said, more evidence that the virus is still spreading largely unchecked throughout parts of the country.

The state experienced the surge after initially avoiding the worst of the outbreak that hit New York and other northeastern U.S. states. Friday’s total was just short of the state’s record high for new cases, set last Saturday.

The Walt Disney World theme parks in Orlando will open to a limited number of guests on Saturday.

To lower the risks, visitors and employees will have to wear masks and undergo temperature checks, and the resort will not hold parades, fireworks displays and other activities that draw crowds.

Around 19,000 people, including workers, signed a petition asking Disney to delay the reopening and the actors’ union that represents 750 Walt Disney World performers has filed a grievance alleging retaliation against its members over the union’s demand that they be tested for the coronavirus.

Florida is one of the few states that does not disclose the number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients. But more than four dozen Florida hospitals reported their intensive care units reached full capacity earlier this week.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis on Thursday called the rising cases a “blip” and urged residents not to be afraid.

“I know we’ve had a lot of different blips,” DeSantis said. “We’re now at a higher blip than where we were in May and the beginning of June.”

Inconsistency ‘Hurts’

Scott Burkee, a former Disney employee from Davenport, Florida, said DeSantis, a Republican, “has shown zero effort to control the spread, he only becomes concerned when Trump does. The virus is clearly out of control.”

Burkee, 43, said different rules in neighboring Florida counties were hampering efforts to control the spread.

“It’s this inconsistency that is hurting us,” he said.

President Donald Trump, a Republican, traveled to Florida on Friday for a full schedule of visits including an event at the U.S. military’s Southern Command and an election campaign fundraiser at a private home in Hillsboro Beach.

Trump, seeking to force school districts and universities to reopen despite the coronavirus, said the U.S. Treasury Department would re-examine their tax-exempt status and funding.

The president already has threatened to cut their federal funding and sought to eject university students from abroad.

“Too many Universities and School Systems are about Radical Left Indoctrination, not Education,” the Republican Trump wrote in a tweet on Friday likely to sit well with his conservative base.

He accuses Democrats of exploiting the pandemic for political purposes by refusing to reopen schools and businesses, even as health experts caution against the perils of easing restrictions too quickly.

The United States has the highest known numbers of both COVID-19 cases and deaths in the world.

The number of confirmed U.S. cases is over 3 million, according to a Reuters tally, stoking fears that hospitals will be overwhelmed.

More than 133,000 Americans have died from the disease, a toll that experts warn will likely surge following recent record spikes in case numbers in many states.

More: Disneyland Paris Will Require Masks on Reopening

(Reporting by Steve Holland and Susan Heavey in Washington and Maria Caspani in New York; Writing by Alistair Bell; Editing by Howard Goller)

Copyright (2020) Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions

This article was written by Steve Holland from Reuters and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to [email protected].

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Tags: coronavirus, coronavirus recovery, disney, disney parks, florida, visit florida

Photo credit: Crowds walk along Main Street toward Cinderella Castle and Tomorrowland at Disney's Magic Kingdom on the final day before closing in an effort to combat the spread of coronavirus disease, in an aerial view in Orlando, Florida, U.S. March 15, 2020. Picture taken March 15, 2020. Gregg Newton / Reuters

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