I know people say you're buying a timeshare and perks are just perks... but those perks are what make people want
DVC in the first place. Those perks make one able to go to WDW more, spend more, have fun more. But once you buy in, you hold very little power to do anything except use your stays.
If perks are driving the buying decision, that is a mistake (as people are (again) seeing). That is why the long-term owners, who have seen perks like valet parking and trading for cruises come and go, keeping telling prospective buyers not to go for the perks. they can come and go for both direct and resale purchasers, so you are asking for disappointment.
Before you buy, you are the desired customer. After you buy, you become an adversary to Disney in a way. Because once you own, you want your property value to remain high so you can sell it later for a good value, but Disney wants it to devalue so they can buy it back for cheap. They control the perks which determine the perceived value, so Disney holds all the cards in the market.
This is a pretty good point. (although the perks are not really much of a factor in the valuation IMO - it's always more a question of the underlying rental value.)
The OP is totally justified.
The OP is justified in their disappointment - I was disappointed when DVC re-allocated the point costs for weekends and weeknights several years ago - but they don't have much in the way of a valid argument. If they had done their homework, they would have understood (intellectually at least) that if they needed to sell down the line, that that would put them in an adversarial relationship to the Mouse.
In trying to sell me DVC, many reps tell me about how I can sell it later, and all my perks (except the transferring to the other timeshare which stopped in 2011) are transferrable.
Pretty sure this is all in your imagination. Timeshare salespeople virtually NEVER talk about what might happen if you sell down the line. Partly because the stuff in writing usually makes the point that no resale values are implied or guaranteed (so direct lies like that one will get you fired immediately) and also, once the guides started down that road, it would quickly become obvious that if Disney were to make changes that significantly hurt resale values, buying resale to begin with will always mean losing less money than paying extra to buy direct...which would send potential direct buyers out the door.
Some DISboard posters who are proud of their ownership of a "Piece of the Magic" might make that point - and it is great that DVC has historically held up very well in resale values compared to most other timeshares.
But if you were ever under the illusion that there was a "Disney difference" - and after the 2011 changes, there is really no excuse - by now you should understand that DVC is fundamentally, just another timeshare.
http://articles.orlandosentinel.com...y-vacation-club-time-share-owners-time-shares
A Disney Vacation Club spokeswoman said customers who bought their time shares directly from Disney have requested such a change. "Our members just felt that that they should get more benefits when they purchase through Disney Vacation Club than those who purchase on the secondary market," spokeswoman Diane Hancock said. She added that the change aligns Disney with other time-share operators who impose similar restrictions on resales.
There was one particularly egregious post by someone else early in this thread:
What if you signed the paperwork for the used car with the understanding that you got the free oil changes. Then the next day they tell you that they decided to change the rules and you no longer get the oil changes? You still have the car you purchased, so you should just be happy.
If this person took their complaint to a judge, the judge would ask to see what was in writing. Once they got to the point that nothing was in writing but they had this "understanding" about the oil changes and other people used to get the freebies so they "assumed" that they would get the freebies...the judge would roll his eyes, charge them court costs and move on to the next case.
Sometimes you have to put on your big boy pants and deal with the reality of the situation. And the reality is that if you are a DVC owner, there continues to be a risk that Disney will damage the resale value of your contract to improve their direct sales numbers. The pixie dusters will call you names for warning potential owners of this reality but it is still there. Owners should have negative feelings about Disney's actions - but also the understanding that the value of any timeshare is always in its use and if you are that concerned about Disney taking further action to damage the resale value of your DVC contract, then it's time to get out and sell.