This is exactly what a reallocation is supposed to accomplish - "balancing points between different size villas".
This is what THIS reallocation accomplishes, not what every reallocation should accomplice.
Florida laws says there is a one-to-one use right to use right requirement ratio, it means that the total number of Vacation Points needed to book the whole resort must be equal to the total number of points sold at that resort. This is the initial requirement that must be respected when designing the first
point chart.
For years almost everyone here on the DIS have though that this requirement was the sole to apply also to reallocation. But it is not the case.
The paragraph quoted by Dean from the multi site POS is out of context so it's difficult to judge its implications in full, but as I read it, it just reiterates the rule above. It has no mention of reallocations. I would like to read what it says about reallocations, I hope Dean can find a way to scan or photograph it. If anyone has an electronic copy of it, please post it.
My understanding is that DVD sells points, DVCMC (
DVC Management company) manages the resorts for the members benefit. Those two are separate entities and they must be. DVCMC must not operate for the DVD benefits, DVCMC must act in members interests. When creating the DVCMC a number of task have been assigned to them and a number of rules guide their actions. Those are specified in the POS.
Rules about the reallocations are described in the the resort POS in Exhibit G, Paragraph 3.3, titled: "Home Resort Vacation Point Reservation Value".
Note that the definition of "Home Resort Vacation Point" is "Vacation Points symbolizing an Ownership interest at a Home Resort and which Vacation Points may be utilized to reserve accommodations at that Home Resort where that Ownership interest is held".
So, paragraph 3.3 of Exhibit G talks about the value of HRVP, and how that value could change over time. If one year I can book a week with my allotment of HRVP, the next year I could be able to book 6 days. This lowers the value of my HRVP for a specific period and might increase it for another.
Rules here are extremely clear, there are a number of rules in the paragraph:
(parts in Italic are direct quotes from the POS)
- the reallocation has to be done to balance demand. When a reallocation is needed and how it is done is at the absolute and unfettered discretion of DVCMC. A reallocation aimed at pushing the sale of larger units is illegal
- during the Base Year the total number of HRVP required to reserve all Vacation Homes during all Use Days in the condominium must always equal, and be symbolic of, the total number of Ownership interests owned by Club Members in the Condominium. This reiterates the rule above, in compliance of the Florida Law
- DVCMC may, in its sole discretion, increase or decrease the Home resort Vacation Point requirements of a given Use Day within a given Vacation Home during the given calendar year by any amount not to exceed twenty percent (20%) of the Home Resort Vacation Points required to reserve a Use Day during the previous calendar year; provided, however, that the total number of Home Resort Vacation points existing within a given Unit at any time may not be increased or decreased because of such reallocation.
This sentence is badly written. Firstly it talks about a Vacation Home, secondly about units and finally it says that "points exist": points are an abstract concept, they do not exist. They represent the reservation value associated with the ownership interest. They should have written "the total number of HRVP required to reserve all Units/VH...".
Having used two different words to describe this rule, it's a bit more confusing. However, since both have been used, both have to be respected. If DVC could reallocate points within a Unit at will, the rule requiring to reallocate only within a VH would be broken. If instead the reallocation happen within a VH, then automatically also the number of points within a Unit remain the same. So I think this is what the rule says. Also note that not being able to reallocate points across units would probably bind DVCMC to reallocate within the same VH anyway. Units are formed of different rooms compositions anyway, so balancing lockoffs, dedicate rooms and GV could prove impossible anyway, but I haven't analysed all units, so if you can find a counter example please comment.
Reallocations between studios and Poly bungalows are clearly illegal. As are THV and change in view category at SSR, BLT and AKV, as those rooms are in different units.
- Any Increase or decrease in the Home Resort Vacation Point reservation requirement for a given Use Day pursuant to DVCMC's right to make this Home Resort adjustment must be offset by a corresponding decrease or increase for another Use Day or Days.
This reallocation has increased the cost of studios in all Use Days without any offset in any other User Day. Poly bungalows have only gone down. THV have only gone up. Sometimes the adjustment has been offset in a different room type in the same Use Day.
DVCMC is not one of the Avengers: they do not have superpowers. They can or cannot do things based on the POS. And for reallocations all of the 4 rules above are clearly written. I cannot see why rule 2 should be the only in effect.
But DVCMC have always done it, it must be legal
Have they? When they found an unbalance of demand between different locations at OKW and BWV they have created a new booking category with the same point requirements (HH and BWView). It was only many years after DVC was established that they created a new booking category with different point costs within the same resort at SSR. Also, the reclassification of BLT rooms didn't happen until a couple of year after BLT went on sale. It seems DVC followed their own rules for a long time and only recently they're started probing members to see if they could get away with.
But they have already done it and you haven't said anything
Can our rights expire in the middle of the validity of our contract? I don't think so.
And what about the increase in lockoff premium?
I believe they cannot increase it, but it's more difficult. It is only cited in the VGF POS, it has always been there, there is no clear rule forbidding it. I do believe that it violates the one-to-one use right to use right requirement ratio in the Florida Law, but I am no lawyer. In regards to the reallocation there are explicit rules in the DVCMC rulebook that clearly state what they have done is not allowed, it cannot be easier. Anyway, in order to increase the lockoff premium they should demonstrate it is in members interest, given the breakage income for DVD will increase as a consequence and members HRVP value decreases, it should be easy to challenge it.