DisDaydreamer said:
Yes. If an expense is paid for by DVC then it must be paid for by our dues... DVC is a non-profit organization so the dues are the only means for paying the expenses. I have been proven wrong on many subjects... so I won't mortgage the farm on this, but I think this is the case.
DVC is
not a non-profit organization.
Disney Vacation Development (DVD) is owned by The Walt Disney Company. DVD builds and markets the DVC resorts. All indications are that DVD makes a lot of profit. Sales and marketing expenses, including advertising and the DVC Guides' salaries, are part of DVD's expense structure. Such expenses are not paid by our dues.
Our dues fund the actual operations of the resorts through a separate condominium association for each DVC resort. These expenses are what you see if you look at the budget document that you receive every year including housekeeping, utilities, front desk operations, reservations, security, transportation, Member Communications, ongoing maintenance, and reserves for major maintenance. Although the condominium associations are non-profit, the operations are carried out by Disney Vacation Club Management Corp. (DVCMC), which is entitled to a management fee (profit), as is normal in the property management business.
See the recent thread,
Relationship Between Disney and DVC for more details.
If the design, manufacturing, and mailing of giclee prints are funded as marketing give-aways to generate add-on sales, then the expense will not hit the DVC Member dues.
But if the giclee prints are funded as some sort of member communications budget expense, then we're paying for the "gifts" to ourselves. I really hope that's not the case.
What makes this particular case troubling is that the giclee print was sent with the new, expensive Vacation Planner in a big, expensive FedEx package. A simple Vacation Planner in a simple 9"x12" envelope would be a legitimate member communications expense.
I hope we didn't pay for the fancy book on expensive paper, or the giclee print, or the inner box, or the outer box, or the FedEx charge.