LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. - Dan Cockerell spent his time as a Walt Disney World college intern checking guests into their hotel rooms, working as a custodian and parking cars. He says the experience 16 years ago has been useful in his current job as general manager of the Disney All Star Resort.
But aside from giving interns valuable experience, the program is a relatively cheap source of labor for Disney and sometimes worries the unionized workers, although union officials approved the program when it began almost 25 years ago.
"None of them are paid properly," Ed Chambers, president of United Food and Commercial Workers Union, Local 1625, said of the college interns. "They're like indentured slaves ... They live on Disney property. They eat Disney food. They take Disney transportation."
Most of the college interns earn $6.25 an hour, well below the more than $11 an hour pay for a veteran employee performing the same tasks. Interns also don't receive any pension or health care benefits like regular workers.
Regular workers sometimes grumble about the college interns when business is slow and their work hours are cut back, such as after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks
Some students leave the program like Cockerell, with a step on the career ladder at the company.
But a few, like Steve Cippittelli, leave with dashed expectations.
Cippittelli, a Schenectady County Community College student, was forced to leave the college intern program last year after a co-worker accused him of making a vulgar remark. Unlike regular hourly workers, who have the right to join unions, the community college student didn't have any labor representation, and he said he was unable to defend himself properly.
"It hindered my education quite a bit. That was a major requirement and I was not able to finish my college education," said Cippittelli, who hopes someday to work again at Disney World since he loved the experience.
"Many times when the students come back here, I have local employers ask me if they can have some of the students who were in the Disney program ... because Disney has such a reputation in the area of customer service," said Bud Miles, a business professor at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. The school sends 75 to 100 students to the program each year, and Miles serves on an advisory board for the internship program.
Disney World offers a more advanced internship program for alumni of the college program. The advanced program offers work in white-collar jobs that are more closely aligned with students' studies, rather than jobs in the parks or hotels.
Omarr Cantu, who recently graduated from Texas A&M with degrees in history and communications, worked as a ride operator at the Tomorrowland Indy Speedway in the Magic Kingdom four years ago. His experience this summer is quite different since he is working as an advanced intern in the marketing department of the resort's human resources department.
Cockerell regularly tells college interns that they can handle anything after being in the program.
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