Sammie
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Aug 20, 1999
- Messages
- 22,130
Well, as mentioned, I was not allowed, and it was checked with a supervisor, so its not consistent by any means.
You are correct, sadly with humans consistency is not always guaranteed.
Well, as mentioned, I was not allowed, and it was checked with a supervisor, so its not consistent by any means.
As I stated up front, this is my position based on philosophy and I realize it's not popular with the DIS group. In part, my position is that it's the only way to be completely consistent at least as much as a company like Disney seems to be able to. It also leads to abuses such as the walking which would seem reason enough to think it's a problem. I think there needs to be some penalty/risk for changing be it financial or risk of losing a reservation, if not both. Something to keep people (or at least decrease significantly) from playing games holding one thing they may not use. Is it a big deal for me, no, I'll learn the rules and adapt to them using them to my advantage as will others.I believe that I interpreted your use of the word deserving correctly but apparently my response did not reflect that. I have no concern about the who would be getting the room beyond the fact that they would have been looking for a room after the other person who has it booked. Considering that, it then seems appropriate to me that someone who booked first would retain the priority on that room even in a different configuration if DVC allows a split. But I think I differ in thought from you in that I do not think it's a given that if a 2BR lockoff goes back into inventory that it will positively go to someone waitlisted for a 2BR lockoff. I believe there are strong possibilities that if there are waitlists for a studio or 1BR that people on those lists are also prospects to receive the room(s) released based on the dates they each went on their respective waitlists.
I don't have any issues if the requirements are a complete cancel and attempt to rebook because the owner has the option to keep the room even if it's more than they need. But theoretically I still don't agree that a person on a waitlist is automatically more deserving of that room (or part of it) because of several things - My belief that the room has the potential to be split on the waitlist to a studio and a 1BR, the fact that an owner can have up to 2 waitlists meaning they have not been restricted to one single room type like the original booking and lastly that they would be booking later than the original person.
If waitlists were restricted to those who have no existing reservation instead of including those who wish to replace a reservation I might have a different opinion but that is not the criteria to waitlist.
There remains the potential for abuse so I still remain unclear if this is an enhancement though.
You are correct, sadly with humans consistency is not always guaranteed.
I think there needs to be some penalty/risk for changing be it financial or risk of losing a reservation, if not both. Something to keep people (or at least decrease significantly) from playing games holding one thing they may not use. Is it a big deal for me, no, I'll learn the rules and adapt to them using them to my advantage as will others.
That is true...I guess my whole thought though, is that when someone can book something as a 2 bedroom and then later change the inventory for the resort by making that 2 bedroom into a 1 bedroom and a studio, those 2 bedrooms will be harder to get.
I know this thought is following what is expressed as fact - that DVC allocates a certain number of lock offs to be booked as 2BR's but what I have seen more than once with the online booking is that if there are studios and 1BR's available then there are 2BR lockoffs. And if either a studio or a 1BR is not available then the lock off is not available either. In that case there isn't any defined inventory being changed and DVC is currently allowing the bookings to define how a lock-off will end up being reserved.
As I stated up front, this is my position based on philosophy and I realize it's not popular with the DIS group. In part, my position is that it's the only way to be completely consistent at least as much as a company like Disney seems to be able to. It also leads to abuses such as the walking which would seem reason enough to think it's a problem. I think there needs to be some penalty/risk for changing be it financial or risk of losing a reservation, if not both. Something to keep people (or at least decrease significantly) from playing games holding one thing they may not use. Is it a big deal for me, no, I'll learn the rules and adapt to them using them to my advantage as will others.
And, I have seen just the opposite... for my August trip, I was trying to change back to a 2 bedroom at BWV, since my DD decided to come, and I could get a 1 bedroom or a studio in a garden/pool view for all three nights, if booked separately, but it only showed the 2 bedroom available two of the three nights.
Now, what I should have done, was call MS to see if they would book them for me as a 2 bedroom, but I did not...in the future I might...but, from inventory online, it was not available, when the others were...maybe it was a glitch.
But, if in fact, the inventory is tied together and if one of the parts is sold out, that would make the 2 bedroom unavailable, then splitting would be okay.
Walking a reservation is one current and glaring example ongoing currently, reserving a 2 BR lockoff tying up the room for later options is another potential one. One can do that now but you have to commit your points for multiple options assuming you have enough.I'm not sure too many people would play games within this context. For what gain? You can't try to rent out one unit and use the other, if you do you're effectively vacationing with strangers. If your "game" would be to cancel one when you decide what you need without committing the same number of points as booking the units separately, then yes, it's less points, but by a negligible number. So the only people playing this "game" would be those with more than 278 points but less than 308 (The BCV cost for a lockoff vs 1br/studio booked separately.)
I can be naive, so if there's a game to be played maybe I'm missing it?
That's an extreme example but the goal would be to significantly decrease the willingness to cancel and change.As for both losing the reservation AND a financial penalty, well then you're basically saying it's not allowed since nobody would bother splitting if that was the case. If I call MS and ask to split and they tell me it's going to cost me the entire reservation and a $200 penalty, I'll just say 'thanks' and won't split.
Then I'm not sure as I though we were discussing. My thoughts are in regards to changing a reservation vs canceling and rebooking, I think all changes affecting dates or unit should be the later 100% of the time.I believe we are referring to 2 different things so apparently I'm not expressing myself well.
When MS offered to let you split the 2BR for one night, had you asked to split it for the two nights but they offered to do so for only one night, or did you ask to split it for just one night? I am confused by your earlier post and it would be helpful to know the answer to this question.My head hurts reading this post but kudos to you all. I have learned so much here and get the most of my dvc due to these posts!
Then I'm not sure as I though we were discussing. My thoughts are in regards to changing a reservation vs canceling and rebooking, I think all changes affecting dates or unit should be the later 100% of the time.
It depends, most you could not that I am aware of and I'm not aware of any where you could cancel part without canceling all but that doesn't mean there aren't other examples. With the other timeshares I deal with, the only one you could actually split the 2 BR without a cancelation and rebooking that I am aware of is Marriott on the older weeks type only, not with points reservations. There you'd have to actually reserve a 2 BR L/O up front. The difference is that they don't have L/O units they dedicate as 2 BR units as DVC has historically done.In other timeshares is it possible for the owners to split a lockoff so that they could rent out part - and have the rented side be independent unlike Disney where it would be keyed the same?
It depends, most you could not that I am aware of and I'm not aware of any where you could cancel part without canceling all but that doesn't mean there aren't other examples. With the other timeshares I deal with, the only one you could actually split the 2 BR without a cancelation and rebooking that I am aware of is Marriott on the older weeks type only, not with points reservations. There you'd have to actually reserve a 2 BR L/O up front. The difference is that they don't have L/O units they dedicate as 2 BR units as DVC has historically done.