- Joined
- Feb 6, 2000
- Messages
- 31,048
Chuck,
My guide will be quite dissapointed to learn that you, as a moderator, do not believe his information is reliable or worth seeking...as will anyone reading this post and considering a DVC membership.
Im not quite clear as to whether you are a Disney advocate, or simply use pragmatism to avoid accountability.
Whatever the case, we are DVC members, shareholders and passionate about the Disney experience. This does not however, excuse efforts by Disney to place the bottom line ahead of the guest or member experience. Without the support of guests, DVC members, or the consumer in general, Disney will be no better than any other corporate entity which believes that the P in Profits supplants the first letter in People !
I like my guide just fine thanks, he pretty well covered everything I've been explaining to you, as outlined in the POS.
I am also a stockholder, and a happy DVC owner. It does not mean that we owners should not familiarize ourselves with our documents, as you should for any legally binding agreement. Nor should we be ignorant of the negative possibilities associated with the ownership.
Guides are licensed real estate agents, their function is to sell DVC Points. They are human, there have been reports on these boards of having received inaccurate information from them. I do not think a guide would purposefully mislead a potential client. I do think that they do not know all the "ins & outs" of the POS.
You asked for the verbiage contained in the POS, I quoted it verbatim. A guide can not override or change the written legal documentation. And again, DVC is, at it's core, a timeshare. You have purchased on ownership interest in a building sitting on land controlled by a limited time lease, and also controlled by the laws and rules of the timeshare. There is a difference in the way that timeshares operate from regular cash hotels. Different laws apply.
The POS is full of possibilities and "what ifs" both for the protection of Disney and the protection of DVC owners. Including the possibilities that perks, trade options, special assessments, denial of use in case your unit is destroyed by hurricanes or disasters, even the posibility that if your unit is destroyed and not rebuilt by DVC, that you will receive your small percentage portion of any insurance settlements and disaster funds, and cease being a DVC member.
Some of these possibilities are remote, others are more likely, like point reallocations. But they are things DVC Owners should familiarize themselves with so they are not "shocked" when changes are made,like the change in the 2010 point charts. Many people were caught unaware of the possibility because heir guides said the points don't change. In fact, they have changed more than once in the history of DVC.
Did you also know there is a possibility that DVC could institute a lottery system for getting reservations during peak travel times? In fact there used to be one in the early years, and for that lottery, there was no home resort priority. DVC reserves the right to re-implement that if it sees a need to do so.
DVC is, legally, what it is, a timeshare, not pixie dust and magic. As long as Disney/DVC lives up to their stated obligations to members, I'm happy. And I have no reason to believe that they will not fulfill their legal obligations. On the other hand, I don't feel entitled to more than what our contracts detail. Perks and trade options are nice, I'm happy to have them, especially the $100 AP discount, but I don't by any means think Disney or DVC owes them to us.
If Disney/DVC thought none of the proprosed situations were at least possible, do you think they would have been mentioned in the POS?

Not touristy at all but only 6 miles from Ixtapa if you want the nightlife. And not to get too off topic: Disney has not renewed their contract with the Zihua's Club Intrawest resort but the same resort is available through RCI for almost 40 less points. 
