Sigh.
Something important to note is how expensive rapids are to run, especially those turntable ones. I bet they literally worked out the cost of running attractions per rider and the rapids is a big scary number glowing in red and they just thought... This isn't worth it. Not outside of the main season. But the rapids are a staple and they're built into the park in such a way that when closed and empty they look awful. A closed ride is a broken ride to the average guest.
Having less days open in the year is a change I struggle to find fault in. For annual pass holders, it's dwindling the value of the ever more expensive pass and I guess there might be an argument there for jobs, but being closed outside of peak days is a standard practise in this industry. It is impossible to predict attendance, so opening on days where you cannot guarantee a profit is daft.
Opening hours is a tricky one. In my opinion, our parks in the UK have always closed too early. In my opinion, any weekend and any holiday period, it should be 10-10 for the bigger, busier parks like Alton and Thorpe on Fridays and Saturdays. The problem is that the British public don't "make the most" of their days out. They don't stay until close and they don't spend enough money in those extra hours to compensate for the added operational cost. Why? Who knows. Maybe it'll take more parks making that jump and experimenting with it to change the way the public behave.* Thorpe have some longer summer hours this year, lets see what happens.
Staggered opening hours are apparently some terrifying and controversial point, but if they're done properly you shouldn't even notice. All parks have staggered opening and closing in some way for some reason. They're not evil, they're sensible. The problem is that they should be a logical operational decision and not a cost-cutting panic decision. They should be based on experience and knowledge of how guests behave and not just the hourly throughputs. I think the decision to not open anything towards the back of a park until the gates have been open an hour is relatively sound logic, but it matters whats at the back of the park, it matters how guests flow in that specific park. There is some sense to Alton's choices, as the vast majority of guests go right at the end of Towers St and Forbidden Valley has traditionally been quiet in the mornings. But.... Wickerman. Wickerman is left at the end of Towers St. People are going to be going left this year more than usual. And 12? MIDDAY? 2 hours after opening? I cant help but think that someone, having proposed such a thing, followed up with "so Smiler, Oblivion, Rita and Thirteen will be ludicrously busy by 12 and that will increase fastrack sales!" as the finishing, convincing blow.
A thing that eternally baffles me is why parks open at 10 in the first place, because anyone who's ever actually been to a theme park knows there's comparatively no one there in the first hour. 11 is when people start to show up. Why even waste money on that hour? Especially Fridays. Why not experiement with opening on a Friday 3-10, for example?
Clearly, Alton needs to shave money off running costs. They wouldn't do this if they didn't "need" to. But it's as if they keep forgetting from past mistakes, it's as if no one making decisions has ever actually visited the park or spoken to any staff on the ground. It's as if every year, everyone gets amnesia.
* Edit: One thing I've always thought would be sensible is a push to open dinner suitable restaurants and marketing to get people to stay for dinner. The problem is, departments don't work together then the park seems to go "nah that thing we tried didn't work". A transformation like this takes years, but the minimal investment vs the potentially gigantic payoff is obvious, surely? There are ways to get people to stay later, but you can't half arse it and wonder why it didn't work.
Chessington's Aztec restaurant thing is a great example of this. The thing is never open when I try and go, or it's fully booked, but the sign is still out in the park advertising prices.