You've played this "I'm an attorney" card several times now and I don't know what sort of law you practice; you may be an amazeballs lawyer in your field; but you seem to struggle at reading/take gross liberties at interpreting the POS
Actually... you're taking gross liberties with my past statements, twisting them out of context.... For Example:
and the terms we agreed to when we bought in. From suggesting Disney can add points to a
point chart to account for refurbishment purposes (
https://www.disboards.com/threads/dvc-point-balancing-2022-vs-2021.3820183/post-62559598),
They DO add more points than they sell -- The sold point total is based on all lock-offs as 2 BRs. When you break them up, it's more points than they sell. So even if every sold point is in use at the resort, as long as some of those lock-offs are broken up, it gives Disney available rooms: Which they can use for refurbishment, maintenance, or breakage.
And yes.... Disney can add small amounts of unsold points just as I suggest -- As proven by what they did with the 2022
point charts, which indeed have slightly more points than the 2021 chart, due to how they managed the seasons.
to suggesting adding a pool is grounds to increase point costs (
https://www.disboards.com/threads/dvc-point-balancing-2022-vs-2021.3820183/post-62561661), you repeatedly miss the mark on understanding the timeshare you bought, or the terms under which you bought it.
***? you are confusing different paragraphs about different things. What I said that in a hypothetical vacation club (where ownership is not sold in individual units), ripping down a unit to build a pool would not be dilution of ownership. Building a pool had NOTHING to do with points.
Now, timeshares, including
DVC -- sell ownership in individual units. So they can't rip down a unit that is actually sold. But they totally could take undeclared/unsold rooms at Riviera, transform them into a game room -- And it would NOT dilute ownership. Because the ownership of your unit remains fully intact. You don't have a say over units that are undeclared and not part of the condo association upon your purchase.
At one point, you compared the devaluation of ownership people were upset about (via the new shifting Easter 7-season point chart) to the loss of ownership percentage due to the lock-off premium in defense of Disney's changes that violated the POS.
As to the former, artificially creating additional points to book a resort (by way of shifting different weeks into different seasons depending on a shifting holiday) without offset, is not. Is this case, Disney is redefining what "holiday" meant when they originally drafted the POS.
As it pertains to the what Disney can and can't do, you seem to give little credence in the explicit terms of the Agreement we all signed when we bought in; in this instance, dismissing terms in the POS that clearly outline the duties of the Association when representing the owners and entering into the exchange, somehow concluding that is permitted because “new contracts” are drafted.
You are making no sense at all.
YOU made a purchase in 2017 (or whenever), you signed a contract in 2017. That CANNOT be changed. You have all the rights included in that contract. Use rights, re-sale rights, etc.
But for example -- Maybe your 2017 contract sold you points at $180 per point. That does NOT mean every future contract also much be $180 per point.
In 2022... they can change the price of the points. They can also change other terms of the contract -- For purchasers MOVING FORWARD.
They can't change YOUR rights --- That's why we see "grandfathering" of rights.
I hired a Florida-based attorney who specializes in Florida timeshare law to go over the exact terms of the POS with me prior to my conversations with DVCMC around a tax issues and again around the 2022 point chart. Those extensive, POS-specific conversations informed the points I presented to Disney. After Disney took time to "look into" it, in both cases they found cause to change course. Per the point charts, like in 2019, Disney Legal conceded nothing, but like in 2019 Disney's plan is to correct for the additional points created by the new seasons.
I'm not sure how many times Disney needs to back pedal on policy before you start to read the POS the way other members do. But as much as you, and the guy who charged me to do it, would like us to believe, reading and understanding the terms in the POS is not something lawyers have a monopoly on.
To my knowledge, Disney still has not changed that 2022 point chart "back." So you think me and Disney are wrong about what Disney can do. That's fine. Go win a lawsuit against Disney.