You said that the new system "favors" renters. We are all held to the same guidelines with no favoritism.
Considering the new system requires less time for them, I would say that yes, it favors them.
Everything that you've stated above applies to both renters and to members who own for personal use.
Except those that own for personal use would be making one reservation, not 20.
Yes, a renter can secure their reservations quicker. So can you or I. Yes, it took more time for a renter to book under the old system. It also took the rest of us more time.
But it took the renter several factors more time under the old system.
If a renter is predisposed to book 20 reservations at a time, I don't think they give a hoot as to whether they need to spend 30 minutes x7 or 30 minutes x1. Anyone who views DVC as a money-making venture isn't going be dissuaded by having to spend a few more minutes on the phone per year.
It's not that they are being dissuaded. I agree that if they want to book those 20 weeks they are going to do it. The point is that since it would take them more time to do so, those that are renting for personal use have some extra time to get in between their reservations. A Renter who doesn't get their complete week is more inclined to bail on the days they did get allowing waitlist fills. Sure, they might leave some WL's open, but the closer they get without filling, the more likely they are to jump. They can't sell a week with holes in it. Those booking for personal use, however, might plug that hole with a stay at another resort.
Much of this is speculation. At the end of the day, depending on what DVC decides to allow (or not), will determine how much of an impact this really has. If they allow people to book day-by-day for stays longer than 7 days, and allow changes/adds/drops of reservations, all we're going to see is more people booking DBD a week in advance and more people initially booking Fri/Sat stays and then dropping those days later on. Which, of course, would favor those with more points as they have more flexibility. In Diane's example, if she had a boatload of points, she could easily book (7) days at OKW and then 3 days later book (7) days at AKV CL. 4-5 Days after she's all booked, she can call back and drop the first (4) days off her AKV reservation netting her exactly what she wanted with less phone calls. Someone with a smaller contract would be at a disadvantage here.
Sure, they can add rules and policies all over the place to try to limit this type of maneuvering, but to that I ask, "Why?" If they would have left things alone, we'd be well and good. It doesn't make sense to make a change that would then require a bunch of additional changes to plug the loopholes it creates. At the end of the day, you're better off leaving things status quo.
