This argument has been stated many many times. The problem with the argument is that DVC is holding reservation times / days that are not spoken for with these "traded, swapped or owned points".
Imagine if you were to call at 11 months and hold a bunch of days at peak use times of the year for DVC members with all the points you had (some people have a bunch). On top of that you are holding these reservations for "potential renters" not actual planned vacations. You then decide over time that you no longer want those dates and give them up right before any penalties would kick-in.
You effectively block out others by speculating whether or not you will rent out these dates or use those dates. That is unfair and Disney is starting to actively track that and has threatened to stop that practice; that is for everybody except Disney.
Disney should treat their points just like everybody else who is not Disney. They have them, nobody is arguing that. They should however not be allowed to block off rooms for Cash or potential other vacation swaps (DCL, RCI or whatever) until they have an actual customer requesting those dates. Only at that time is when Disney should be allowed to check availability like everybody else who is an owner. Also those reservations would have to fall under the very same 11 / 7 rules we as owners need to abide by.
There should never be cash available reservations when people with points are told there is no availability, if all owners had the saem rules applied to them.
That is what would be fair.
However, Disney controls and leverages "their points" under far more questionable and ambiguous "rules" than the ones they impose on the general DVC Owner population. Not sure where my cotnract allowed that, but Disney seems to think their points are controlled by other rules.
And BTW we do not, have not and dont foresee ever renting out any of our points, so this is in no way a post defending renters.
I see what you are saying but respectfully disagree.
Remember that one of the biggest factors in any timeshare trade is the trading power of the units involved. DVC is willing to accept XXX points (whatever the value may be) from a member in return for booking something like a Disney cruise. DVC then turns those points into rooms which are made available to CRO. The idea is that the CRO bookings will ultimately cover the cost of the cruise.
You are suggesting that DVC members be given first shot at ALL rooms and cash bookings would then come from whatever is left over when the dust settles. If that were the case, CRO cash bookings would have a much lower success rate and DVC would be forced to demand even more points from members when booking those non-DVC destinations.
The same is true for deposits into RCI which DVC controls. If the units deposited with RCI as a result of our trades were only the undesirable leftovers once members have booked, DVC members would not have nearly as great trading power within RCI.
If there were evidence that DVC was cherry-picking the most profitable weeks and resorts for RCI deposits or CRO inventory, then I would agree that DVC was acting improperly. But availability via CRO suggests that Disney is pretty fair in spreading that availability among all of the resorts and weeks.
If you reduce the quality of rooms made available to CRO and RCI, members will ultimately pay the price in the form of higher trading prices and reduced success.