The "most magical place on Earth" is no longer welcoming Venezuelan employees who are losing their temporary legal residency in the United States.
Bloomberg reported that those working at the Florida-based Disney company were told that after President Donald Trump revoked protections they're no longer able to work for "The House of Mouse."
"The company sent an email to employees under Temporary Protected Status (TPS) on Tuesday stating they had been placed on a 30-day unpaid leave effective on May 20," the report said.
Those unable to give work authorization after 30 days will be fired, said the email shared with Bloomberg.
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“As we sort out the complexities of this situation, we have placed affected employees on leave with benefits to ensure they are not in violation of the law,” the Disney email said. “We are committed to protecting the health, safety, and well-being of all our employees and their families, and our HR and legal teams assist employees who may be navigating changing immigration policies and how they could impact them or their families.”
One employee was already turned away from work on Tuesday, they said, due to their temporary protective status.
The company said that about 45 employees are impacted out of the 360,000 total people with protected status in Florida, the report said. Approximately 60% of those are Venezuelan. The decision could affect more than half of the 600,000 Venezuelans in the United States.
The Supreme Court ruled on Friday to extend "an order that blocks the administration from using a wartime law" used to send individuals accused of being in a Venezuelan gang to a Salvadoran prison.
However, the report explained that the latest decision from the high court allows the Department of Homeland Security to cancel a TPS extension created under President Joe Biden's administration.
Congress created TPS in 1990, and there are currently 17 countries that fall under the status.
Read the full report here.