HooKooDooKu
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 8, 2003
- Messages
- 1,876
I know on the surface this might sound like a silly question, but do you have to be a Florida resident to get these last-minute Flordia rates?
I understand the concept of offering last-minute discounts to ensure you have a full ship and that, because of their proximity to the port, you target Florida residents as being more likely to do a last-minute trip.
I can also understand the idea of placing a road-block to people who booked their cruise 9 months ago at a higer rate looking to have their rate discounted. (Someone else has claimed that if a Florida resident books a year in advance, that when the Florida rates come out, they can update the cost of their trip to the new Florida rates if they are cheaper than what they originally booked for).
But what I can't understand is if DCL is offering discounts to fill the boat and I currently don't have a reservation, but would make one if I could get it at the Florida rate, why would they refuse to take my money just because I live accross the boarder in Alabama?
The other thing I wonder about... is such a thing even legal? Since DCL in ingauging in interstate commerse, if I pressed the issue with a lawsuit, could DCL have any legal basis to charge residents of one state a different rate than another state given that it doesn't really cost them more to service someone from Alabama or South Carolina than it does to service someone that lives in Florida? While I don't know if there are any laws on this matter as it relates to corporations, the government doesn't have the power to charge different states different taxes/duties (Artical I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution begins with "The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises...but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States").
So to be redundant, if I currently don't have a reservation, can I book a reservation at the Florida resident's rate if I live in another state?
I understand the concept of offering last-minute discounts to ensure you have a full ship and that, because of their proximity to the port, you target Florida residents as being more likely to do a last-minute trip.
I can also understand the idea of placing a road-block to people who booked their cruise 9 months ago at a higer rate looking to have their rate discounted. (Someone else has claimed that if a Florida resident books a year in advance, that when the Florida rates come out, they can update the cost of their trip to the new Florida rates if they are cheaper than what they originally booked for).
But what I can't understand is if DCL is offering discounts to fill the boat and I currently don't have a reservation, but would make one if I could get it at the Florida rate, why would they refuse to take my money just because I live accross the boarder in Alabama?
The other thing I wonder about... is such a thing even legal? Since DCL in ingauging in interstate commerse, if I pressed the issue with a lawsuit, could DCL have any legal basis to charge residents of one state a different rate than another state given that it doesn't really cost them more to service someone from Alabama or South Carolina than it does to service someone that lives in Florida? While I don't know if there are any laws on this matter as it relates to corporations, the government doesn't have the power to charge different states different taxes/duties (Artical I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution begins with "The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises...but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States").
So to be redundant, if I currently don't have a reservation, can I book a reservation at the Florida resident's rate if I live in another state?


