港澳天下彩

漏 2024 WLRN
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

A housing crisis and inflation are making it harder for theme park workers to stay in Florida

Photo: Pixabay
Photo: Pixabay

Theme park workers met in Orange County on Monday to discuss how inflation and an affordable housing crisis are making it harder for them to live and work in Florida.

鈥 UNITE HERE Local 737 (@UniteHere737)

Unite Here Local 737 workers gathered at the Bear Creek Recreation Center on Monday night wearing shirts that read 鈥渢he fighting union.鈥

Dozens crowded the main community room as they shared stories about how inflation and an affordable housing crisis are making it harder for them to survive. 

Tiara Moton stood out wearing a white chef鈥檚 uniform. She works at Disney and says this month she鈥檚 been struggling to pay for the basics like rent and electricity. 

鈥淚鈥檓 in a situation of trying to figure out how I鈥檓 going to come up with my rent, which was due what yes鈥 today? I had to sacrifice some of my rent money in order to pay my light bill because my lights got turned off. And I was sitting in the house for two, three days with my two-year-old child with no electricity. In the heat our food went bad.鈥 

Then there鈥檚 Kadejha Reid who also works at Disney and is a single mom. She鈥檚 been having a hard time paying for necessities like childcare. 

鈥淐urrently, I have a one-bedroom apartment which is $1,200 dollars. They went up on my rent. I had to change my son鈥檚 daycare he was at since he was five months old. And I鈥檓 not able to get food stamps.鈥 

Victoria Burns says she considers herself lucky even though she has to live with two roommates to make ends meet, and she says she feels the pain of her situation daily. She says she lives with PTSD.

鈥淎nd I know I鈥檓 privileged, that if I really get in a tight spot, I can call my parents but there鈥檚 so many people that don鈥檛 have that. But I鈥檓 26 starting tomorrow and I鈥檓 asking my parents for help and like, I feel like a failure. And that鈥檚 not right.鈥

Back in October, state law set the minimum wage at $15 dollars an hour. Workers now say more pay and benefits are needed to combat inflation. 

Florida is consistently ranked one of the most expensive places to live in the country.
Copyright 2022 WMFE. To see more, visit .

Danielle Prieur
More On This Topic