Tag: closures

  • Cause of ride closures at Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom Monday night revealed

    Cause of ride closures at Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom Monday night revealed

    Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom is back to normal operations after a power outage caused numerous ride closures Monday evening, a spokesperson told FOX Business.

    The cause of the power outage is not being disclosed, but at one point on Monday evening, 18 rides were shown as closed on the My Disney Experience app. That is nearly half the attractions offered at the resort’s most-visited park, according to USA TODAY.

    The high temperature reached 84 degrees in the Orlando area on Monday, data from the National Weather Service shows.

    A Disney spokesperson said many people were watching fireworks later in the day when the power outage occurred. Anyone who was on a ride when it went down was safely escorted off, and the park’s after-hours event went on as planned.

    NATIONAL PLAN FOR VACATION DAY ENCOURAGES AMERICANS TO ARRANGE TRAVEL PLANS

    A statue of Walt Disney and Mickey Mouse stands in a garden in front of Cinderella’s Castle at the Magic Kingdom Park at Walt Disney World on May 31, 2024, in Orlando, Florida.  (Gary Hershorn/Getty Images / Fox News)

    At 10 p.m., which was listed as the park’s closing time for those without an after-hours ticket, only three rides remained shut down: Space Mountain, Tiana’s Bayou Adventure and “It’s a Small World,” local FOX 35 reported. 

    The special ticketed event allowed guests to be in the park until 1 a.m. Tuesday.

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    Guests whose visit was impacted by the power outage may reach out to Disney’s guest relations to see if any accommodations could be made. Walt Disney World’s single day, single park tickets are date based, starting at $119 a day, when purchased directly from Disney online. 

    On Monday, Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts led a celebratory parade at Magic Kingdom the day after his team defeated the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl LIX, FOX 35 reported. 

    Currently, Astro Orbiter, Big Thunder Mountain Railroad and The Hall of Presidents in Magic Kingdom are closed for refurbishment. 

  • DEI office closures at universities pile up after another state orders end to ‘woke virus’

    DEI office closures at universities pile up after another state orders end to ‘woke virus’

    West Virginia University became the latest college to shutter its Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (DEI) office, as a wave of state and federal leaders urged an end to what critics call a paradigm of reverse-discrimination.

    As of Monday, the Morgantown school’s DEI division webpage was still active, advertising an “interactive social justice experience” called the “Tunnel of Awareness” later this month.

    It also invited students to take an “Implicit Bias Test,” take part in a “Yappy Hour” with therapy dogs, and join WVU Vice President Meshea Poore in discussions on how to “live, learn and work together with care and respect for each other” on campus.

    The Mountaineers’ DEI office will be replaced with an ADA and Title IX-centric Division of Campus Engagement and Compliance.

    MOUNTAIN STATE CRACKDOWN: GOVERNOR’S ORDER LEADS TO NEARLY 60 SUSPECTED ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT CRIMINAL DETENTIONS

    The closure of the department came pursuant to GOP Gov. Patrick Morrisey’s executive order declaring DEI practices to be in conflict with the Mountain State and U.S. Constitutions.

    “No [entity] under authority of the governor or … receiving state funds shall utilize …resources [to DEI positions, activities procedures or mandatory training],” part of the order read. 

    The Republican governor’s order preceded President Donald Trump’s similar federal order by a few days, as the latter’s inauguration fell one week later.

    Morrisey said the “woke virus” needs to be “eradicated” in schools and that he is “a believer… that God looks at us [and] the rule of law looks at us as equals.”

    DOGE ANNOUNCES $1B IN SAVINGS AFTER NIXING 104 DEI CONTRACTS

    “We don’t want special preferences unlawfully benefiting one group of another race, color, age, ethnicity. We have to make sure that we’re taking steps to treat everyone the same under the law.”

    Morrisey thanked WVU for taking the necessary steps to close its DEI office, remarking that too often there is public pressure to “do the wrong thing.”

    April Kaull, executive director of communications for WVU, said Monday the new office is not a rebranding but a “shift in focus that will align with the governor’s directive.”

    “The new West Virginia University Division of Campus Engagement and Compliance is positioned to carry out its core mission and to serve all within our university community. It will focus on ensuring the university adheres to federal and state guidance and fulfilling the needs of our campus community, including compliance with Title IX and the Americans with Disabilities Act, which is its primary focus,” Kaull said.

    In December, another big football school — Michigan — dismantled its DEI apparatus and said it would no longer “solicit diversity statements as part of faculty hiring, promotion and tenure.”

    The nonaccredited University of Austin in Texas nixed any iteration of DEI in 2024 as well, with an official saying the college will promote freedom of speech and merit-based admissions.

    “They talk about safe spaces. We want to create an environment that’s safe for ideas to be explored and where there’s not risks to the student for taking positions as they explore,” UATX Vice President Michael Shires said at the time.  

    At least six other states — Alabama, Idaho, Iowa, Indiana, Kansas and Utah — have banned or limited DEI teachings or initiatives within application processes.

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    Meanwhile, an official for Mount Holyoke College in Northampton, Massachusetts, said she hoped higher education will not capitulate to Trump’s vision in this regard, and that such executive orders are ripe for legal challenge.

    “I don’t believe that the value of saying we live in a multiracial democracy is wrong,” President Danielle Holley said in part to the AP.

    Northeastern University in Boston changed the name of its DEI office to “Belonging in Northeastern” in what it called a “reimagined approach.”

    In New Brunswick, New Jersey, a professor at Rutgers University had to cancel an upcoming session geared toward internships for students from HBCUs after a contractor informed her federal funding for the conference was put on-hold.

    Last week, Missouri State University in Springfield announced an end to its DEI programs — a move administrators said was supported by its Board of Governors.

    College President Richard Williams said the school “values diverse thought and actions and support[s] all our students faculty and staff.”

    But, Williams added that leaders in Jefferson City had outlined new requirements because nearly two-fifths of MSU’s budget is earmarked from state funding.

    Fox News Digital’s Jamie Joseph and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

  • Pressure from Shein, Temu accelerate retail closures

    Pressure from Shein, Temu accelerate retail closures

    An ongoing surge of U.S. retail closures is expected to persist in 2025 as legacy companies face relentless competition from eCommerce platforms Shein and Temu. 

    Coresight Research, a firm specializing in retail and technology, estimates that closures will rise to 15,000 in 2025. The firm also projects about 5,800 store openings nationwide this year, but results in a net loss. 

    With a wave of bankruptcies and closures announced in 2024 from major brands such as Big Lots, Party City, and recent announcements from Kohl’s and Macy’s extending into 2025, Coresight Research estimated that over 1,900 store closures are expected by the second week of 2025. 

    To put this in perspective, 7,323 stores closed in 2024, marking the highest number of closures since 2020, when nearly 10,000 stores shut down, according to Coresight Research.

    It was a nearly 60% increase compared to the same 52-week period in 2023. 

    US RETAIL CLOSURES HIT HIGHEST LEVEL SINCE PANDEMIC

    John Mercer, Coresight’s head of global research, told FOX Business that the same issues plaguing the industry in 2024 will persist, “specifically the competitive pressures” from the fast fashion platforms that have risen in prominence in recent years as inflationary consumers leveraged their cheap prices. 

    Shein and Temu offer a range of products and clothing at low prices. The companies face criticism over labor practices, environmental concerns, and business ethics such as intellectual property infringement.

    Sale and store closing signs at a Macy’s store in the Brooklyn borough of New York, US, on Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2025. (Yuki Iwamura/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Still, people continue to shop at the platforms, making them a threat to U.S. based retailers. 

    “We think Temu and Shein together worldwide are a $100 billion threat effectively to retailers,” Mercer said. “We reckon they made about $100 billion in global sales last year. The vast majority of that will be peeled away from legacy retailers… taking sales, taking market share at their expense,” Mercer continued. 

    Coresight believes the “threat from Temu and Shein is an under-recognized pressure on many retailers” and that “there’s little prospect of that competitive pressure easing up,” according to Mercer. 

    Another factor contributing to their estimate is the upcoming period of “policy disruption,” according to Mercer.

    WHY NEIGHBORHOOD PHARMACIES ARE CLOSING

    “We’re not sure yet what’s going to happen with tariffs. We’re not sure how tariffs would flow through to costs on retailers, internal consumers and how consumers would react to that,” he said. 

    Mercer said the risk with tariffs is that “you end up with escalating inflation.” 

    A shopper enters a Party City store in Richmond, California, US, on Thursday, Dec. 26, 2024.  (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “We saw how badly U.S. consumers reacted last time there was increased inflation. The risk is we get more inflation and consumers respond likewise again,” he added. 

    Putting tariffs aside, positive trends in Coresight Research’s consumer sentiment metrics and upbeat macroeconomic indicators suggest that consumer demand could be reasonably strong, according to Mercer. But even if demand is strong, the “risk to legacy retailers is that, as I mentioned, consumer demand, increasingly goes to newer players.” 

    MACY’S ACCELERATES STORE CLOSURES THIS YEAR

    Coresight Research CEO Deborah Weinswig said in a statement that inflation coupled with a “growing preference among consumers to shop online to find the cheapest deals” took a toll on many brick-and-mortar retailers last year. 

    Sale signage outside a Macy’s store in the Brooklyn borough of New York, US, on Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2025.  (Yuki Iwamura/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Several brands fell victim including American Freight, which announced it was shutting all 329 of its locations as part of its parent company’s bankruptcy proceedings, and Big Lots filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in September to help facilitate the sale of “substantially all” of its assets to its “stalking horse bidder” Nexus Capital Management. It also announced plans to permanently close dozens of stores. 

    Macy’s also began shuttering locations as part of a turnaround strategy announced in February 2024. It’s CEO, Tony Spring, told analysts during a recent earnings call that the company now expects to close about 65 locations this year, up from its previous forecast of 50 announced at the start of the year.

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    Party City, with 738 expected closures, and Big Lots, with about 661 expected closures, is leading the pack for closures so far this year. 7-Eleven isn’t far behind with 333 expected closures. 

    Coresight also tracked expected closures for Aldi, CVS Health, Dollar General, Dollar Tree, Family Dollar, Five Below, JD Sports, Kohl’s, Macy’s, The TJX Companies and Walgreens Boots Alliance. 

    However, the majority of companies that are mentioned are simultaneously opening up locations throughout the year. 

    Mercer said it’s important to recognize that there are three categories of retail closure activity. In one case, retailers may be closing all stores because they are liquidating their assets. There are also distressed retailers who are restructuring and closing large swathes of stores, but not necessarily all of them.

    The third kind of closure is when legacy retailers recognize that they need to reshape their estates to better cater to changing consumer preferences.