Are we going to call that "official policy?" It's just hard to believe there's no official statement posted somewhere aside from a casual mention of a hotpot on an, albeit apparently official; Disney blog page. I'm really not trying to be argumentative here, but a supposed email from an "Online Guest Service" person isn't exactly official policy either. Again, I'm not trying to be argumentative here, but you would think that something supposedly so important would have more than a casual mention in a blog or an email.
I really don't care. We don't cook in studios anyway. If we plan to cook, we get a 1BR+. I'm not dragging crap down there to cook meals. I either have it or I don't.
There are some interesting arguments here on both sides. It's home. It's a timeshare (Which is a whole 'nother argument as to when it's a TS and when it's a hotel room which seems to be when either one favors Disney.). I'm not sure there's anything that precludes guests cooking in their rooms, aside from the fact that Disney doesn't want you to. So in a 2BR lock-off, I can cook on one side but I can't cook on a hotplate in my child's room on the other side? I'm not sure I'm buying all this. It sounds good. If you're Disney. But I'm not sure they have legs to actually stand on. Maybe that's why they haven't, and maybe that's why there isn't an official policy.
It would be interesting as well to see if this is addressed in FL timeshare laws. Maybe there's a conflict here and Disney doesn't want to deal with that. Probably not, but I'm just trying to think outside the box since no real answer appears to exist.
All I know is something appears to be amiss when apparently there is no official policy to be found anywhere, despite someone arguing "read your contract" in some Facebook post. I admit I haven't read mine in a while, but I'm pretty sure it's not in there either. All very intriguing. And yet something there should be a cut and dry answer to one would think.