Nancyg56
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2005
- Messages
- 29,489
Yeah, but in one case, it's a glitch in the software or simple human error. In another case, it's deliberate oversight or malice. So it does kind of matter. The first could happen anywhere. The second most certainly should not happen at Disney. I'm not going to stay in any hotel that allows that to go on. There are so many ways to insure it doesn't.
I cannot see malice as the cause here. I do see some sort of breakdown though, and that is what needs to be addressed. I had some trouble following the entire chain of events, but if I understood correctly, management agreed to let this family stay in that room and have it cleaned in the morning. I honestly do not care whose idea that was, and how insistant the guest was, this is where the training needs to be focused. THat room was not cleaned. The root cause behind that error is negligible when compared to a manager knowing that a room was not clean and still allowing the family to sleep in it.
I am not sure why the OP agreed to this solution, or whose idea it was in teh first place, but IMO this is where the entire fail begins and ends. Yes, the OP's anger escalates after this, but the avalanche of complaints would never have occured had that manager refused to let them stay there until morning before it was "deep cleaned"
What the heck is that anyway? I know Disney does a VIP cleaning under specific circumstances, btu I would not trade remaining in dirty room so tha I could benefit from VIP cleaning the following day.
No, glitches happen. They happen becuase we are all human and we all make mistakes. Disney is no diffeent than any other place, it employs humans.
Regardless of human error, or negligence, Disney needed to make it right. It was awful.
That being said, I do think there's a difference between a negligent housekeeper vs human error or a computer error.
I cannot see that disaster as done by a lazy housekeeper. That would just be outrageous IMO. It wasn't just an oversight while she cleaned the room, like "oops." Lol.
I dont think it matters from a guest point of view. From Disney management, yes. Was the housekeeping staff so short that there was no one to check rooms, or that the housekeeper ended up going so quickly that it was inevitable that a room got overlooked?
I stay at a lovely little hotel in NYC with I travel with my granddaughter. Before I enter the room, the housekeeping manager or supervisor inspects the room. They do this for every room. After that, the room is released for occupancy. All ot would take is one or two more employees per shift at every resort to provide this failsafe. Computers make errors, and peole make mistakes. One more set of eyes is a small price to pay so that this kind of chaos is not repeated.

