, the managing director of investment research at global financial firm UBS, estimated that health and economic concerns would keep the parks closed through 2020 in his report, titled"The Eye of the Storm."
Hodulik hypothesized that the two American parks might be able to “regain their recent operating cadence in 18 months." That is on the long end of the, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. In early March, Fauci anticipated it would take a year to a year and a half to test and mass-produce a vaccine.
However, Quadrani also believes that attendance will be"pretty weak" initially, pointing to the travel bans that remain in effect, as well as the closure of the U.S.-Canada border to nonessential travel. Similar conversations are swirling around the reopening of Universal theme parks, where leaders are weighing the many steps necessary before guests can be welcomed back.
It'll be opened sometimes in May
Nobody can afford it anyways
It really is a small world after all when your living in quarantine
Really hope they triple the tickets when they reopen.