BCV23 said:
When I call, the Member Service CM checks on availability for the room size we have requested. If there is a room (any room), she/he then calls Special Requests to block an accessible room. This is done rather seamlessly but it has always happened that way for us.
Good luck, BroganMC. Are you on the waitlist? BTW, we couldn't get one night for the next trip with our daughter at about 9 months out. But as I recall, that was general resort availability. I'm hoping our waitlist comes through.
That is precisely what happened for us. I just bought DVC last week, as a matter of fact, so I was eager and anxious to discover for myself how it would work.
I have arthritis and several joint contractures so my mobility is severely limited but my creativity greatly enhanced, if you get my meaning.

A roll-in shower is a must if I have any desire of bathing independently and/or staying for more than 2 nights. (You can only do so much with a sink and wash cloth.) If I had it my way all ADA rooms would have showers instead of tubs, but I understand there are those who need tubs for their kids. (It's just when those kids get too big to lift I wonder about.)
Anyhoo, I figured I'd have a harder time since I was dealing with a fraction of available inventory and inventory was already taxed according to these boards. My DVC Guide didn't have a clue about it. (Isn't that the way it is with all ABs?

) On the grand tour he proudly showed off the walk-in shower units of the one bedroom and said it was handicap accessible. Yeah, with a 4 inch step and very narrow door. But I'm used to this from other timeshare tours at Marriott. (Marriott, btw, has absolutely excellent accessibility in their Orlando resorts, despite the tour. Notify them one month prior to check in and they have exactly what you need, no problem. Plus free wireless internet - love that perk.)
After exploring my options with MS and sending my rep on a 45 min quest for availability of various resorts for my time, I ended up with a confirmed reservation for my travel. I'm not staying at my first choice resort (VWL) or even in the room config I wanted (studio vs. pricier 1 bedroom), but I'm warming to my choice... 1 bedroom at Saratoga Springs. I'm traveling with 2 other adults and proximity to DTD would be a plus for us. We wanted to enjoy the Christmas decorations and closeness to the parks too, so I put us on waitlist for the Saratoga studio (save points), BCV (close to EPCOT and monorail), and VWL (beautiful decorations) but with an all or nothing stipulation (all 4 days or none) with confirmed accessibility to limit hopping and disappointment.
MS has been great at noting all my requests and keeping up with them. When we've been disconnected, they've even called me back to update me. And they've made numerous calls to Special Needs as well as the hotels themselves to check on the exact accessibility of certain units.
I just hope this is a freak time (Dec 7 - 11) as far as availability is concerned and not the norm. I'd hate to work this hard every time I make a DVC ressie. It makes getting CRT ressies easy.
(Seriously. CRT requires setting an alarm, speed dialing and 5 minutes worth of making and confirming a request. Accessible accomodations with DVC requires setting a calendar alarm, calling, launching into a 5 minute or longer schpeil about your exact needs, educating a MS rep, then waiting on hold while they talk to special needs. I spent 2 hours the first day on hold, clarifying requests and ensuring I got what we needed and wanted.)
And in the meantime, my creativity is in overdrive trying to figure out how I could use the studio bathtub with a rented transfer bench or a regular one bedroom with help climbing that 4 inch step. It's just I've been traveling with Marriott the last 5 years so I've really gotten used to their easy accessibility requests. Disney could learn a thing or two from them.