Behind the meticulously curated magic of Walt Disney World, a high-stakes legal showdown has drawn the direct, heavy intervention of the federal government. While millions of tourists flock to Central Florida for carefree vacations, a gritty corporate battle over employee rights has resulted in a sweeping enforcement action from Washington.

The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB)—operating under the executive branch of the Trump Administration—has dropped a massive legal hammer on one of the most prominent third-party restaurant operators on Disney property. Following a comprehensive investigation, the federal board has ordered the immediate reinstatement of a worker who was fired after serving as the public face of a high-profile unionization campaign and significant back pay.
The bombshell ruling proves that federal labor oversight applies to everyone—even the multi-million-dollar conglomerates renting space from the Mouse.
The Core Conflict: Fired for Raising Her Voice
At the absolute center of this federal directive is 25-year-old Julissa Ruiz. Until her sudden termination, Ruiz worked as a cashier and server at Pizza Ponte, a popular Italian eatery situated in the bustling Disney Springs shopping and dining district.

Pizza Ponte is operated by the Patina Restaurant Group, a massive hospitality subsidiary of Delaware North that manages a highly lucrative portfolio of dining spots across Disney World property.
The trouble began when Ruiz and her colleagues partnered with the UNITE HERE Local 737 union to launch a public organizing drive across several Patina-run establishments. Unlike direct Disney employees, third-party workers at Disney Springs operate without negotiated wage floors or standard job security. At the time of her organizing efforts, Ruiz's wages were so low that she was forced to live on a friend's couch just to survive Central Florida's skyrocketing rent prices.
Management terminated Ruiz just months after the union drive went public, a move that labor advocates immediately flagged as illegal corporate retaliation.
Beyond Disney Springs: Espionage Accusations at EPCOT
The federal government’s complaint, officially issued by the NLRB’s regional director, goes far deeper than an isolated incident at a pizza counter. The extensive investigation unearthed a broader, deeply concerning pattern of alleged anti-union surveillance and worker intimidation cutting across Patina's elite theme park properties.

According to the official unfair labor practice (ULP) charges, corporate management didn't just target activists at Disney Springs—they actively deployed anti-union tactics inside EPCOT. The federal complaint explicitly details that Patina unlawfully surveilled employees' union activities at the heavily booked, space-themed Space 220 Restaurant.
Furthermore, federal officials allege that supervisors explicitly threatened EPCOT employees with the outright elimination of desirable hybrid job roles if workers decided to exercise their legal right to sign union authorization cards.
Case Blueprint: Ruiz v. Patina Restaurant Group

| Case Element | Official Details & Specifications |
| The Worker | Julissa Ruiz (25, former Pizza Ponte Cashier) |
| The Employer | Patina Restaurant Group (Third-party Disney operator) |
| Enforcing Authority | National Labor Relations Board (NLRB Region 12) |
| Core Violations | Retaliatory firing, illegal employee surveillance, and union coercion |
| EPCOT Citations | Intimidation and hybrid job threats at Space 220 |
| Federal Mandate | Full job reinstatement and comprehensive back pay |
| The Ultimatum | Settle the complaint or face a federal trial on September 15, 2026 |
The Ultimatum: Pay Up or Face a Federal Trial
The federal directive leaves the hospitality giant with very little room for corporate maneuvering. The Patina Group has been formally ordered to reinstate Ruiz to her exact job with no loss of seniority, along with full back pay for every paycheck she missed during her 18-month displacement.

Predictably, the Patina Group is digging in its heels. In an official legal response, the corporation denied all allegations of unfair labor practices, maintaining that its employment actions were taken in good faith and on non-discriminatory grounds.
However, local political leaders are refusing to let the company hide behind corporate jargon. U.S. Congressman Maxwell Frost (D-FL) joined labor advocates to fiercely slam Patina’s defensive maneuvers, accusing them of trying to bleed out working-class citizens financially.
“Part of their strategy is to delay, delay, delay,” Frost stated. “Because they can afford to be in court. They can afford to wait, but while a worker is missing out on their paycheck week after week, they're hoping that they'll give up. If they think that, they should litigate it. Put your money where your mouth is. Take it to court.”

If the Patina Group refuses to comply with the federal board's mandate to make Ruiz whole, it will be forced to do so. The NLRB has officially locked in a firm federal trial date for September 15, 2026. Until then, the warning shot to independent Disney contractors is loud and clear: worker protections remain absolute, even in the vacation kingdom.



