Disney's firefighters backed DeSantis as he feuded with the company. Now his new board has ignored their pleas and stripped away their park benefits.

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  • Disney World's firefighters were once in support of DeSantis' plan to assume control of the Reedy Creek Improvement District.

  • That was until his new board stripped them of their discounts and free passes to the parks.

  • A number of firefighters confronted DeSantis' board last week at a meeting about their decision.

Disney World's first responders once backed Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida's plan to assume control of the Reedy Creek Improvement District, which had autonomous control over the land that Disney occupied.

"Anything has got to be better than what we currently have," Tim Stromsnes, the communications director of the Reedy Creek Professional Firefighters Local 2117 union, told the Orlando Sentinel in January.

But now firefighters are having second thoughts after the new oversight board moved to strip them of special Disney perks they've had for decades. Last week, the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District, the rebranded Reedy Creek board, revoked all of the firefighters' free passes to the Disney parks and resorts. First responders told the Miami Times this made visits to the theme park unaffordable.

"The removal of this benefit takes away, for some, their entire reason for working here," a firefighter named Pete Simon told the Miami Times.

A number of firefighters confronted DeSantis' new board at a monthly meeting last Wednesday about the free passes and what they meant for them and their families. They said in the meeting the discounts afforded to them by Disney were a major reason they chose to work there, the Miami Times reported.

DeSantis, who briefly paused his presidential campaign as Hurricane Idalia neared his state, has made efforts in recent weeks to move beyond his long-running feud with the entertainment giant. Disney previously sued DeSantis and his administration amid their increasingly acrimonious relationship.

"So all we want to do is treat everybody the same, and let's move forward. I'm totally fine with that," DeSantis told CNBC, encouraging Disney to drop the suit. "But I'm not fine with giving extraordinary privileges, you know, to one special company at the exclusion of everybody else."

The feud began when Disney, after significant internal pressure, opposed DeSantis' Parental Rights in Education bill that critics deemed "Don't Say Gay" due to its ban on discussion of sexual orientation and gender identity in kindergarten classrooms through third grade. There was also a broader restriction based on what material was "age-appropriate."

DeSantis argued that he wasn't specifically targeting Disney when he pushed the legislature to end its special status shortly after the fight over the parental rights law. But in his book, the governor seemed to delight in taking on one of the largest employers in his state. Disney also scrapped a $1 billion project planned in the state.

Read the original article on Business Insider