I was not offering an opinion on what they should do, only what I understand the current situation is. However, one who needs a guarantee of a given time and HC unit should look at something that's a fixed week and fits their needs to be sure. That means staying off site at the present time or booking through cash, timeshares require flexibility. It actually gets even more confusing, convoluted and risky if you look at exchanging. I assume even HI, which is selling essentially fixed weeks, is not selling fixed units and thus would not bypass this problem either. You'd have to sell less points in order to accommodate such a system, likely by about 1 full week per unit per year on average, or you'd have to sell fixed week, fixed unit options. Currently there are almost always more HC units than needs though that is likely to shift as the population and membership ages.That's what I think stinks. Sorry, it's just my opinion.
That's what I think stinks. Sorry, it's just my opinion.
I'm not advocating for a seperate category, like "savannah view" or similar. All I'm saying is for someone who is handicapped there should be rooms for them. I realize it's an imperfect world, but it just seems non-sense to have HA rooms and then have none for people who really need them.
Hey, this thread kinda got off topic didn't it?![]()
If Handicapped rooms were a separate category, eventually they would all be reserved with the guests being a mix of those with a true need and those who simply take what is available. Many resorts wouldn't have the ability to keep excess HA rooms available for maintenance. So at a small resort like BCV or small category like AKV Value, when a HA room is taken out of service for maintenance, who gets bumped for a non-HA room?
But they don't hold the rooms open and prevent someone else from reserving. Holding a reserved HC room is appropriate and standard procedure IF it's reserved. But it must first be open for reservation else they will tell you it can't be guaranteed. It's a 2 step process, basically you call and IF there's availability, then they see if there's a HC unit that can be blocked. IF there's no availability of anything OR if there's no HC availability, they have no options and have fulfilled their obligations. It's not really a separate booking cat, more of a subcategory.You do realize this is exactly what happens now? BCV has 15 HA rooms, 5 of which are studios. If a room goes down for maintenance it doesn't matter if it is HA or not. Things go out of service and have to be repaired. But a guest needing HA has less wiggle room to deal with. If a non-HA guest was blocked for room X at BCV and it goes down then they can shift to rooms A-W. HA guest only has rooms Y & Z to chose from and ONLY if they don't have a guest in them.
The solution often becomes guests get dispatched to another resort with an HA room. This last trip a family I met registered at Pop was sent to AKL when they didn't have the HA room needed.
On a previous visit to BWV a family checked in for a Grand Gathering with multiple rooms. There was no HA room for the grandfather as promised. He got sent over to SSR and had to leave his family behind.
Thing is HA rooms need to be held back for those in need over all other requests UNLESS it is late in the day and that is the only thing left to offer. At my football stadium they oversold all the HA PSL seats so now the team does not have adequate seating for those with special needs. They were greedy and didn't plan ahead. So now they have to pay extra to adjust. PSL owners must have a doctor's letter signed every year to prove they need the HA seats (or they get moved to non-HA seats) and the team buys back all tickets from HA PSL owners who chose not to go to a game.
It's just common sense here guys. Another thing that helps is for all Front Desk staff to be trained on what sort of rooms they are offering. SSR has a nice color-coded map but needs more detail over whether this is a room that has a "roll-in shower" or "tub with rails".
There's no reason to be upset. My assertion isn't that they can meet everyone's needs but rather that often that they have to force those that don't need a HC to take them most weeks of the year. It's not a number issue in terms of how many HC units they have total that causes the problems you reference though there may be management and assignment issues issues and it's possible that the units won't always match up to the needs of the individual since once size doesn't fit all in this situation. This will likely change at some point though as I noted above.So when Dean or someone else insists Disney has more HA rooms than they need I get a little hot under the collar. Unless you are traveling in the least busy months of the year it simply isn't true.
Remember one thing... I did not ask for compensation. I was notified via voicemail with an envelope left in the room.
I never expected to check in at any particular time. I was doing what I could to maxamize the time in the room by arriving early.
For all of you that have quoted the "rules" thank you very much, but I can read just fine. I understand how dvc works and what I expect from them.
The next time I am offered something for my headache, I will gratiously accept and not mention it on this board. I am sure that a lot of you are nothing more than jealous. Had you been offered, I am quite sure you would have accepted!!
What bothered me is eventually Disney will not even allow you to check on your room before 4 pm because of things like this. I suppose they could charge $25 to check and see if the room is ready before 4, and if it is they could charge an extra $50 to let you in early.