Judge rules Anaheimâs living-wage law doesnât apply to Disneyland
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A Superior Court judge ruled against Disneyland Resort workers in a class-action lawsuit challenging the companyâs exemption from an Anaheim living-wage law.
Passed by voters in 2018, Measure L requires hospitality businesses within the Anaheim Resort area to pay a tiered minimum wage topping at $18 an hour next year if they have tax rebate subsidy agreements with the city.
On Monday, Orange County Superior Court Judge William D. Claster granted a summary judgement in favor of the Disneyland Resort stating that a Disney expansion agreement passed by the city in 1996 didnât meet the legal definition of a tax rebate subsidy under the living-wage law.
âThe court is confronted with a narrow question: whether any of the agreements identified by the parties gives the Disney Defendants a right to a rebate of their taxes,â read Clasterâs tentative Oct. 29 ruling. âWhether the city of Anaheim âsubsidizedâ the Disney Defendants in a colloquial sense is not an issue.â
Before going to trial, Claster ruled that the â96 agreement, in which the city issued $510 million in bonds for resort-area infrastructure improvements in partnership with Disneyâs $1.4-billion investment in Disneyâs California Adventure, Downtown Disney and Disneyâs Grand Californian Hotel, didnât constitute the tax refund, abatement or discount needed to trigger the living-wage law.
Anaheim continues to pay off bond debt, mostly through sales, property and transient occupancy taxes generated by the Disneyland Resort as part of the â96 agreement.
âThe finance agreement has the apparent effect of giving the Disney Defendants a 100% abatement on debt service payments, not taxes,â read Clasterâs tentative ruling. âThis is a significant benefit to the Disney Defendants, but again, there is no evidence that the finance agreement somehow lessens their tax obligations.â
Randy Renick, an attorney representing the workers in the class-action suit, criticized the decision.
âWe disagree with the courtâs narrow reading of Measure L and believe Mondayâs ruling eviscerates the 2018 vote to adopt a living wage in Anaheim,â he said. âThe plaintiffs are considering all their options, including appeal. Itâs disappointing that Disney can take hundreds of millions of dollars from the city of Anaheim and yet refuse to pay over 25,000 workers a living wage.â
Anaheim also financed the construction of the $108-million Mickey and Friends parking structure in the expansion and leases it to Disney for $1 per year, an agreement that attorneys unsuccessfully argued subjects it to the living-wage law.
Two more recent tax rebate agreements didnât go before Claster; the Disneyland Resort asked Anaheim City Council to shred them in the leadup to Measure Lâs victory at the ballot box.
In 2015, Anaheim council members voted to extend a decades-long entertainment tax moratorium for the corporation. Under the policy, if a future council levied an admission tax on parkgoers, Disney would receive a full refund. The following year, a council majority also approved $267 million in transient occupancy tax rebates over 20 years for a planned Disney luxury hotel.
After council members unanimously voted to terminate both agreements at Disneyâs request, Anaheim City Atty. Robert Fabela issued a nonbinding legal opinion ahead of the 2018 election that positioned the remaining â96 Disneyland expansion deal outside the bounds of a âtax rebateâ as defined in the living wage law.
âWe have always been committed to fair and equitable pay for our cast members but have always agreed with the Anaheim City Attorneyâs conclusion that Measure L does not apply to the Disneyland Resort,â said a Disneyland spokesperson in a shared statement. âWe are pleased the court has confirmed that position.â
The city also sees Clasterâs summary judgment as affirming.
âWhile we never want to see a dispute like this play out in court, we appreciate the judgeâs determination,â said Mike Lyster, Anaheim spokesman. âIt validates what we already knew and have said â the city of Anaheim does not provide any rebate or subsidy to Disney.â
Anaheimâs living-wage law currently applies to a trio of nonunion hotels in its resort area including the Westin, the Anaheim Hotel and J.W. Marriott.
The DoubleTree Suites was the first business in Anaheim subject to the law in 2019, but its transient occupancy tax rebate agreement with the city ended in April, making Measure L no longer applicable.
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