That sounds ridiculous, since you were going to arrive several hours later. I think I would have argued that one some more (you probably did)!! :annoyed:GKK said:We had to purchase a guest certificate for my son and family, because they were arriving a few hours earlier than us. RCI suggested they wait for us to get there before checking in. They have a 2 year old baby...sure wait in the car until we get there...I don't know why I didn't think of that. Thanks RCI!
GK
GKK said:We had to purchase a guest certificate for my son and family, because they were arriving a few hours earlier than us. RCI suggested they wait for us to get there before checking in. They have a 2 year old baby...sure wait in the car until we get there...I don't know why I didn't think of that. Thanks RCI!
GK
GKK said:Do they pay more for their RCI membership?
sfwilshire said:A bit more ($20 a year if memory serves), but I don't think that's the reason. The systems are just set up differently. I think Points can handle more names and Weeks can't. Just a guess, though.
Sheila
rickandcindy23 said:We are a little perturbed that RCI has not yet combined our points and weeks memberships into one.
GKK said:We had to purchase a guest certificate for my son and family, because they were arriving a few hours earlier than us. RCI suggested they wait for us to get there before checking in. They have a 2 year old baby...sure wait in the car until we get there...I don't know why I didn't think of that. Thanks RCI!
GK
Whoa!sfwilshire said:They no longer charge you an annual membership fee for your Weeks account and will give you a free one if you don't already have one, but I don't remember them ever suggesting that there would be any sort of combination.
Dave M said:I believe there is actually a simple reason for requiring a guest certificate.
The guest certificate protects both the resort and the person holding the reservation. There are all sorts of reasons why someone other than the person holding the reservation might show up to check in. Suppose I then show up to check in and am told that some people I have never heard of checked in for my reservation, mentioning my name or having called ahead of time using my name to "authorize" them to check in.
Then what? In some states, it's not very easy to evict those improper residents from my unit, potentially leaving me with no place to stay. I'll be mad and I'll hold the resort responsible for allowing an unauthorized family to keep me from my rightful occupancy.
Is such a scenario likely? No. But all it takes is once in today's sue-happy, big-jury-awards climate to make a resort wish they had followed RCI's (or II's) policy on guest certificates.
Many major hotels now require I.D. upon check-in to match (or reasonably match) the name on the reservation. Some hotels accept a credit card in the same name; others require photo I.D. I believe the reasons for requiring such I.D. are the same as for timeshare guest certificates.
I'm confused. Are you suggesting that, if I'm the owner in my example and someone else, without a guest certificate, is allowed to improperly check in to my unit, the resort will hold me responsible for any damages awarded to me?Gadabout said:The requirement for a guest certificate is not truly to protect the resort, because they will always go back to the owner for damages....
Dave M said:I'm confused. Are you suggesting that, if I'm the owner in my example and someone else, without a guest certificate, is allowed to improperly check in to my unit, the resort will hold me responsible for any damages awarded to me?
The purpose of the guest certificate is to ensure that only properly authorized people are allowed to check-in.