I'll throw in my 2 cents. FWIW, I am an owner, not a renter.
This may sound obvious, but from reading these boards over the past couple of months, it appears that a good portion of the
DVC community doesn't really understand the difference. As an owner, I am an owner. I am not a renter. I own a portion of Saratoga Springs Resort. Disney Vacation Club Management is simply a hired management service. We (all of the owners at SSR) collectively pay them a management fee to provide the service of operating these resorts on our behalf.
When DVCM decided to close the resorts, this wasn't a financial decision for them to make. They made this decision on our behalf because that is what we hired them to do. If collectively (not sure what percentage of the ownership would qualify) decided that DVCM wasn't acting in our best interest, we could technically hire someone else to do the job. FWIW, I am not sure on what would have to happen, and how this would work.
When an owner rents out a non-refundable reservation, the owner is still responsible to fulfill their end of the contract. If they do not, the contract could either be considered null and void. The risk that the renter is taking on is that they agree that their deposit is non-refundable provided the owner still offers up the lodging. I think we can all agree that if the owner rents out their points and then cancelled the reservation and kept the points for their own use, the renter should be entitled to a refund.
Going back to my original point, when DVCM decided to shut down the resorts, they did so on our behalf. In other words, we shut down the resort ourselves. As an individual, I may not have decided to shut down the resort, but my paid representative did. We cannot claim that the resort shut down was to no fault of our own. We are the owners. We are the ones who hired DVCM. Our representative was the one who made that decision. We therefore did not fulfill our end of the contract. The renter did not sign up for the risk of resort shut downs. We did when we bought a deeded real estate interest.
For those who claim that the renter should bare some of the risk because they are getting a "deal" compared to Disney prices, I say to them, they are taking on some of the risk. The renter is renting up to 11 months in advance, and cannot cancel for any reason with the expectation of getting their deposit back. That is the risk they took by getting the "deal". They did not sign up for the risk of the owner cancelling the reservation (again, we are the ones who closed the resorts) and leaving them with nothing. If the resorts opened up but the renter cannot travel because of border issues, or their own countries restrictions, then I believe that is on the renter.