Beginning on Monday, the theme park stopped selling new passes for residents of Southern California, which were priced at $469 each, Disneyland spokeswoman Suzi Brown said. Disneyland suspended new sales of the Southern California Annual Passport in 2014 to help address surging attendance that led to long lines and frustration, especially on Sundays. At the time it was suspended, the Southern California pass sold for $359 and gave pass holders access to Disneyland and neighboring Disney California Adventure for 215 days of the year. Southern California residents can still buy the Southern California Select passport for $339, but it allows access to the park for only about 150 days a year, blocking out weekends, holidays, spring break and most of the summer. About 550,000 homes in Southern California have the highest risk of fire damage.
Source: Los Angeles Times November 21, 2017 00:33 UTC