bumbershoot
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 69,750
DVC owners ARE getting their points back.
Not if they were about to expire. Not if they are expiring before things open back up.
You are out x dollars. The owner who can't use or rebook those points is out the cost of the points and the dues they paid AND they can't take a vacation.
You feel like you're the only one losing out. You're not. Everyone is.
For the owners to keep someone's money while getting their points back is so unethical.
You don't even know if that's happening. You're worrying (and worrying people here) over something you don't know is real.
They need to step up customer service and talk to people - not shut their phone lines down.
They are a small company. Have you done customer service? Have you had peope screaming at you? I remember having someone screaming at me that their mother's day present was going to be late...and this was a month after my 55 year old mother had DIED. Those conversations are vile. Don't do that.
Undercovertourist had to send out an email the other day saying "We want to help you but can’t if our team members quit due to exhaustion or abuse." You know that that means people are abusing their reps. If they are abusing the reps over a ticket purchase, you know they are doing the same if they rented a DVC reservation.
They aren't ignoring you. They are helping people who got on the phone before you or who have reservations before you.
And they are in an impossible position depending on circumstances.
David’s should at least be refunding their commission of $24% and not profiting from this.
You don't think they should be paid for their time? For their website and phone lines and reps and the spark of imagination for creating the company?
I think DVC should relax the banking rules as a gesture of goodwill.
Remember that timeshares are governed by laws, and they will run into legal limits for what they might be able to do.
Guess I won't be renting DVC any time soon. or ever. This just sucks.
When renting you're agreeing to a "no refunds no matter what" policy, so I imagine you wouldn't have rented to begin with, yes?
A lawyer for that likely won't cost anywhere near $5,600, because the owners will probably settle as soon as they see you aren't just passively walking away.
Hmm. Now imagine that your owner is a lawyer, too.
What does the contract say? What did you agree to when renting?
You guys are making situations up in your head that haven't happened. They might not be happening. Just...wait. See what can happen.
(The absolute worst customer service moments I ever had with customers were on holidays when people were at home and were going stir-crazy...I really really feel for the reps on the phones right now...
Guys, don't be THOSE people. I am STILL telling stories of the evil people I talked to (and I could almost always help, and help well, but people were loaded for bear before they got me on the phone), and I worked at amazon from 1999-2002. Do you really want to be that sort of story 20 years from now?)