It's the old "But officer, EVERYONE was speeding! It's not fair that only I get a ticket!" routine.At this point, I'm not sure how anyone is surprised by this. How many DIS DVCers are resale-only members, and know exactly what that means, but happy to take advantage of discounts they know they are not supposed to be getting? How many of those then complain when it's "not consistent" or, worse, when the loophole is finally closed?
Last year when the same debacle happened I recall that they did move folks to the resort side, so interesting that this wasn’t the solution this year. Inexcusable that the same issue happened again, but it looks like they caught it a lot faster, were quicker to shut it down, & quicker to notify folks who thought they’d scored a unicorn. I’d guess that they learned from last year’s experience thus the different approach this year.We made reservations over a week ago for Grand California Hotel through the DVC website. Everything was confirmed for a trip in August, around the 7 months mark. I booked plane tickets from Charleston, SC to Los Angeles, booked a rental car, etc. Then today I received a phone call from DVC (over week later from the booking), stating they had to cancel our reservation. The reason provided was that they had a "system malfunction" and over booked the studios for the nights I reserved. I figured they were going move us to the hotel side. To my surprise there was nothing else offered, they just told us that the reservation was cancelled and the points would be refunded.
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The phone call ended with me nicely telling her I'm showing up for those dates and expecting a room. What an obvious shift away from the customer experience by management and (from what i'm told) another IT failure. How in the world does a company like Disney have such bad IT. Anyway, I just wanted to share my experience incase anybody wanted to know what current DVC members are dealing with.
I'm wondering how many reservations slipped in before they caught it, and what the occupancy rates are right now on the hotel side. They may not have any rooms (or not enough).Last year when the same debacle happened I recall that they did move folks to the resort side, so interesting that this wasn’t the solution this year.
A large amount of Inventory was released across wdw a few months back and I picked up a tough reservation that wound up being real. How can I distinguish what is real or not when the DVC reservation cast can't?
This right here. They are still bringing resort rooms back online in Orlando as we speak. Anaheim is fully open, and the last time I looked, GCH and DLH were headed back to their pre-pandemic occupancy rates for the spring months. What are you going to do, put a DVC owner who lost a 2BR villa in a standard room at Paradise Pier? They don't even have a food location there currently.Well...last year a ton of inventory suddenly showed up at WDW. I jumped and got beach club. I checked on it every single day for something like 3 months, expecting it to disappear. Even now I'm a bit nervous.
But the thing is...WDW was opening inventory around that time, and it made some sense that things would open. Maybe that's the situation with your reservation as well.
It wasn't a small single DVC resort in Anaheim.
this should have been picked up in the 1st 24 hours after reservation for a nonexistent room was made. Disney should offer to pick up any fees you encounter to change or cancel airline tickets that were bought in support of this reservation.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure in most places the speed limit is what that big white sign with the black letters says it is.That one turns out to be true. A guy in Ann Arbor got out of a speeding ticket on a road notorious for speed traps. Turns out one mechanism for setting speed limits in Michigan is something like the 85th percentile speed of natural traffic. By that standard, the limit on the road should have been non-trivially higher.
The limit remains where it was and I still stay within five of it, because I don’t have time for that.
I’m getting ready to pay my MF’s so perhaps I’m sensitive to solutions like this - but is it Disney the Corp. or DVC in it’s role as the trading component who pays these fees, or is it the VGC owners who pay them through their MFs, if the latter my question is should those owners who likely paid top dollar for their points & made their reservations at 11 months have to pay higher MFs to compensate for yet another DVC tech debacle? If there’s a mechanism to assure that costs associated w/ the fallout from incompetence like this comes from DVC’s share rather than MFs then I agree, but I suspect the costs are passed on to the owners?this should have been picked up in the 1st 24 hours after reservation for a nonexistent room was made. Disney should offer to pick up any fees you encounter to change or cancel airline tickets that were bought in support of this reservation.
I don’t get the criticism of the OP for relying on a reservation to move forward in trip planning. Not everyone keeps up on everything Disney. A dump of rooms doesn’t seem like a red flag as resorts keep expanding capacity after so many shut downs over the pandemic.
this should have been picked up in the 1st 24 hours after reservation for a nonexistent room was made. Disney should offer to pick up any fees you encounter to change or cancel airline tickets that were bought in support of this reservation.
The CEO is the problem.... welcome to the new Disney. Money matters most.
I don't think anyone is critical of the OP. In fact, a few posts (mine included) actually make a point of excluding the OP from any criticism and assume their reservation was made based solely on checking availability on their dashboard.I don’t get the criticism of the OP for relying on a reservation to move forward in trip planning. Not everyone keeps up on everything Disney. A dump of rooms doesn’t seem like a red flag as resorts keep expanding capacity after so many shut downs over the pandemic.