Florida

Universal Orlando Has Utility Workers Sign Nondisclosure Agreements for New Park

At a press conference that featured numerous officials that included Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Orange County Mayor Jerry Demmings, Comcast CEO Brian Roberts announced ‘Epic Universe’ as the newest theme park under the brand.

What to Know

  • Open-government experts say the Orlando Utilities Commission is municipally-owned and must follow the state's public records laws.

Workers for a city-owned utility have signed nondisclosure agreements with Universal Orlando Resort, but open-government experts say it may go against the state's public records laws.

A Universal spokesman tells the Orlando Sentinel the company is only protecting trade secrets as it prepares to build its Epic Universe theme park. The company has disclosed few details about the project.

But open-government experts say the Orlando Utilities Commission is municipally-owned and must follow the state's public records laws.

The agreements say Universal can sue workers for a breach.

University of Florida law professor Mark Fenster says the utility can't contract away its Sunshine Law obligations.

An investigation by the Sentinel found the utilities commission and Universal worked to keep records secret after visitors and employees were electrically shocked at its Volcano Bay water park last June.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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