gratefulfred
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2012
- Messages
- 715
At $400 a night they should figure out a way tooThe problem is that they can't accommodate everyone's sleeping/napping/etc. time schedule.
At $400 a night they should figure out a way tooThe problem is that they can't accommodate everyone's sleeping/napping/etc. time schedule.
And really if you get woken from a nap while at disney, it's not the worst thing that can happen---I'll take a shortened nap at disney any day!!
Sure. They could add enough staff to meet every guest's personal needs. Disney won't eat that cost, they'd raise the rates to cover all their costs plus.At $400 a night they should figure out a way too
At $400 a night they should figure out a way too
In another thread someone posted they got a reservation at the boardwalk for next year for $700 ( I don’t know what room or view)a night. The four seasons is cheaper than that and doesn’t do this to their guests. Disney has plenty of money to meet the needs of the guests, especially a little privacy which they are paying over top dollar for. They could divert some of the money generated from parking to this since they aren’t using it to figure out if the people they are charging for parking even have cars or not.Sure. They could add enough staff to meet every guest's personal needs. Disney won't eat that cost, they'd raise the rates to cover all their costs plus.
The money generated from parking will be going to wages since wages are going up at WDW.In another thread someone posted they got a reservation at the boardwalk for next year for $700 ( I don’t know what room or view)a night. The four seasons is cheaper than that and doesn’t do this to their guests. Disney has plenty of money to meet the needs of the guests, especially a little privacy which they are paying over top dollar for. They could divert some of the money generated from parking to this since they aren’t using it to figure out if the people they are charging for parking even have cars or not.
Really you don’t think when spending that much you don’t deserve a little privacy so your toddler can take a nap. Sometimes I think the people on this board are so blinded by their love for Disney they would be ok with cameras in the rooms
Thats a guess at best, other people are guessing reduction of staff and park hours are offsetting the cost of higher wagesThe money generated from parking will be going to wages since wages are going up at WDW.
Sometimes I think the people on this board are so blinded by their love for Disney they would be ok with cameras in the rooms
RealistsOR people are realists. Or would prefer not to have other guests slapping their own homemade signs on the door of the hotel rooms in attempts to dictate a well publicized security procedure.
Regardless of what we think though that isn't what is happening or will happen. You can definitely email guest services about your feelings but it's likely that it won't change.In another thread someone posted they got a reservation at the boardwalk for next year for $700 ( I don’t know what room or view)a night. The four seasons is cheaper than that and doesn’t do this to their guests. Disney has plenty of money to meet the needs of the guests, especially a little privacy which they are paying over top dollar for. They could divert some of the money generated from parking to this since they aren’t using it to figure out if the people they are charging for parking even have cars or not.
At $400 a night they should figure out a way too
People seem to be discussing this as if it's some kind of customer service initiative that isn't being done right - that Disney should try harder to accommodate guests' schedules.
This isn't a customer service initiative.
There isn't a hotel manager in the known universe who'd willingly create a policy that inconveniences guests and makes them feel like their privacy is being intruded on, AND increases their personnel costs. This isn't something Disney is doing because they want to. They're doing it because someone has asked them or told them to do it.
I have no inside knowledge on this at all, but I suspect it's being driven by law enforcement. Maybe it's a post-Las-Vegas thing, maybe it's a response to child trafficking. I've seen billboards in the non-touristy parts of Orlando about trafficking and being on the lookout for traffickers, so I assume there are rings operating in the area. Maybe local or federal law enforcement has asked them to check rooms. Again, I'm just speculating.
If they're looking for this sort of thing, they're not going to schedule the room checks and let the bad guys know when to have the kids out of the room.