I understand and do agree that it limits them in the reasons
why or when they may choose to change the point charts. But that is still very lenient and not really what I think what the question is.
"In order to meet the Club Members' needs and expectations as evidenced by fluctuations in Use Day demand at the Condominium experienced by DVCMC during a given calendar year, DVCMC may, in its sole discretion, increase or decrease the Home Resort Vacation Point requirements..."
That wording is very lenient for Disney. they could use almost anything to show that there is a
fluctuation in demand for a certain room type or time and then they can choose to change the charts at their sole discretion. A room type booking up almost instantly , a room just booking faster than others, members walking certain rooms, room types going unbooked for long period of time, just being the last room type at the resort to book up, etc. could all be reasons they use, then they can change those rooms up to 20% per year as long as the total points in the chart don't go up and they don't go above the maximum reallocation values. (And IMO having maximum allocation values at all is one of the clues that they meant to be able to move
points charts across the whole resort, otherwise they may not have needed them)
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It sounds like the question for some members isn't
why or
when they can choose to change the point charts, but
how or
in what way can they change the charts.
And in that case the only solid language I have found anywhere is that the
entire resort must balance with the point chart, and that they can increase a use day in a vacation home by no more than 20% up or down in any 1 given year. That is it, with almost no (if any at all) mention of the various units, though somehow a lot of members are convinced that they have to balance the points in each unit as well anytime there is a chart change, which IMO is too difficult a thing for Disney to ever want or have wanted to tie themselves up in.
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I think unless there is evidence to the contrary, in this case the simplest solution is the most likely. I think it is most likely that they meant to be able to reallocate across the entire resort all along (and there is no direct language that prevents it), but legalese and the contracts can be confusing (as seen by members swearing that they have to balance units even though there is no actual language I have seen that says that), so they clarified their position over time and the newer documents better represent what they meant all along.
I find that
much more likely than that they originally intended to have to balance each unit every time there was a reallocation with the point charts, but then they left that out of the contracts, then decided to declare some units at some resorts in a way that would make balancing units almost impossible, then chose to try and allocate across units anyway, then decided to
change the meaning and wording in the newer documents, then afterwards gaslight all the members about it