Originally posted by dcfromva
There are a lot of major chains that will tell whether a non-smoking room is available when you make your reservation. Some will also guarantee that a non-smoking room. Then, I can make a decision as to whether or not I will stay there. I have changed where I am staying based on this.
At a conventional hotel, it's relatively easy for them to reserve rooms against a smoking inventory and a non-smoking inventory. And if I can't get a guaranteed non-smoking reservation at a Marriott, I'll try the Hilton or Wyndham across the street instead.
This becomes far more difficult when you're dealing with
DVC timeshare reservations for several reasons.
Non-smoking DVC members aren't going to want to hear that they can't have a guaranteed non-smoking reservation if DVC were to offer such reservations. And smoking DVC members aren't going to want to hear that they can't have a guaranteed smoking reservation. DVC members can't use their points to stay at a Hilton or Wyndham across the street instead -- nor would they want to.
DVC "solves" this by treating smoking and non-smoking as preferences, not as guarantees -- and by making the vast majority of the rooms non-smoking. This, in turn, leads to situations where smokers wind up in non-smoking rooms. I imagine that most smokers respect a room's non-smoking status (even though they would prefer to be able to smoke in the room), but some will smoke inside anyway. So non-smokers wind up in rooms that smell of stale smoke, because the previous guest didn't respect a room's non-smoking status. And there are cases when a non-smoker is assigned to a smoking room.
I don't think there's an easy answer.
This situation is made more difficult because the DVC resorts operate near 100% occupancy. For example, OKW is 98% owned by DVC members, and those members expect to be able to use their points; the points correlate directly to the capacity of the resort. (Of course, there are nights with lower occupancy -- but that means that CRO was unable to sell nights that thay received when DVC members used points for Disney Collection or Concierge Collection, or it means that DVC members let some of their points expire.) 100% occupancy is not unusual.