In addition to making depostis and exchanges, I've been buying Extra Vacations (or equivalent) from RCI for the past couple of years.
Last January, I bought 3 Extra Vacation weeks from RCI for use in November at a cost of $1,600.
I now see from RCI's web site (Your Travel Plans) that one of my EV weeks in S.E. Florida has disappeared. Speaking with an RCI rep about it, I have learned that I will be credited with only part of my cost. I expect that once RCI catches up all the resorts, a second week will also be disappearing - also at my loss no doubt.
The fairness and ethics of RCI's current policy leaves me very disappointed. Let's look at it from a slightly different perspective, as follows.
Let's say tickets for a Rolling Stones concert scheduled for a 50,000 seat stadium (at $100 ticket) are sold through Ticketmaster and the Stones don't show up. Is Ticketmaster then entitled to keep a half of the $5 million because from a legal perspective it's customers' responsibility to know they were actually buying 'tickets', and not 'a performance'?
Similarly, I bought a week at a resort from RCI in good faith - I did not realize that I was buying a lottery ticket (a.k.a. Exchange Certificate) that 'might' get me a week at the agreed-upon resort.
The agent I spoke to could not speak to the fairness of the policy of course so I would appreciate an opinion of the fairness of this policy from RCI management. I hope, once they think about it, that they can be convinced to do the right and ethical thing, not just what is 'legal'.
Thank you.
Last January, I bought 3 Extra Vacation weeks from RCI for use in November at a cost of $1,600.
I now see from RCI's web site (Your Travel Plans) that one of my EV weeks in S.E. Florida has disappeared. Speaking with an RCI rep about it, I have learned that I will be credited with only part of my cost. I expect that once RCI catches up all the resorts, a second week will also be disappearing - also at my loss no doubt.
The fairness and ethics of RCI's current policy leaves me very disappointed. Let's look at it from a slightly different perspective, as follows.
Let's say tickets for a Rolling Stones concert scheduled for a 50,000 seat stadium (at $100 ticket) are sold through Ticketmaster and the Stones don't show up. Is Ticketmaster then entitled to keep a half of the $5 million because from a legal perspective it's customers' responsibility to know they were actually buying 'tickets', and not 'a performance'?
Similarly, I bought a week at a resort from RCI in good faith - I did not realize that I was buying a lottery ticket (a.k.a. Exchange Certificate) that 'might' get me a week at the agreed-upon resort.
The agent I spoke to could not speak to the fairness of the policy of course so I would appreciate an opinion of the fairness of this policy from RCI management. I hope, once they think about it, that they can be convinced to do the right and ethical thing, not just what is 'legal'.
Thank you.
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