But this isn't quite true. It doesn't say that "at least one Use Day in a Studio will be made available at XX points", it says "
each Club Member will always be eligible to reserve ... at least one Use Day in a
<type> Vacation Home
for every X Home Resort Vacation Points". Strictly interpreted, this means for each unit type there must be at least enough nights available at or below point value X so that the member owning the most vacation points could use all his or her points to reserve a unit of that type at point value X. Subject to availability, meaning some other member hasn't gotten to those nights first. But that's a bit nonsensical. The only sensible interpretation is that it's meant to be an average, such that there always exists some combination of nights that would allow any individual owner to book Y nights at a total cost of X*Y (or less), subject to availability.
Taken to an extreme, and to use a concrete example, an owner at BWV, where the maximum reallocation value for a standard studio is 15* points, should be able to reserve every night of the year in a studio for a total cost of 15*365 = 5475 points. But the actual cost to book a standard studio at BWV in 2020, ignoring the extra day for the leap year, is 5533 points. Or, to rephrase, our hypothetical owner of 5475 BWV points would be short 58 points required to book the entire year, and thus unable to reserve "at least one Use Day in a Studio Vacation Home for every 15 Home Resort Vacation Points".
* I'm taking the BWV 15 point value to be accurate based on other comments in this thread and the link that someone posted to dvcnews.com. I haven't independently verified that it's correct.
To me, this says a few things:
- The 2020 point charts are clearly in violation of the "maximum reallocation" point values in some categories, including BWV standard studios (subject to my disclaimer* above).
- Reading the OKW POS that @WebmasterDoc posted (thank you!), there's no indication that "maximum allocation" must be "in effect" for those average point values to apply. Rather, they are given as the average point values at which "each Club Member will always be eligible to reserve" a particular unit type, and in fact this is stated prior to any mention of "maximum reallocation". The "maximum reallocation" concept (and chart) appears to be nothing more than an illustration of what would naturally occur if the point chart was flattened; there's no implication that they must do away with seasons in order for the maximum average value guarantees to apply.
- IF the initial point allocations for a given point chart are at the maximum (so, for example, if the initial point chart for BVW had the total points to book a standard studio every night of the year at 5475 points, and other booking categories similarly set at the maximum from the outset), then that would argue strongly for @zavandor's interpretation that points can't be reallocated across unit types, because any such reallocation would have to leave at least one category in violation of the maximum reallocation average. BUT... I ran the numbers on OKW, and the results were not quite what I expected. In every booking category, the average cost (and thus the total annual points required) to book the unit are lower than that unit's maximum reallocation average. This was true of both the 2019 and 2020 point charts. Thus it would appear that at least at OKW, there is some room to reallocate across unit types without exceeding the stated average maximums.
For the record, I don't think any of this means we need to break out the pitchforks, nor do I think it's necessarily legally significant. (If
DVC can amend the terms of the POS at their sole discretion at any time, is any of it legally binding?) But I also don't see any point in denying what is fairly clearly written.