HitchHiker71
Moderator
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2018
- Messages
- 5,048
- Reaction score
- 4,357
- Location
- The First State
- Resorts Owned
- Outer Banks Beach Club I (PIC Plus)
Colonies at Williamsburg (PIC Plus)
CWA VIP Gold (718k EY)
National Harbor Resale (689k)
Oh, give it a rest... you say I sound like a broken record?
I assure you the Florida AG (and the entire Florida Republican party) receives more money in campaign contributions from Wyndham than the "2 or 3 affected parties" who would complain. Plus they have legitimate real cases affecting Floridians (you aren't a Floridian, i'm guessing... I am) to be working on. As a Florida resident, I would feel betrayed (see what I did there) if they wasted their time doing what you suggest
I respectfully disagree with you. Holding any company accountable for fundamentally deceptive sales practices isn't a bad thing - while we like to state that the written contract is the only thing that matters - the fact is that oral contracts also matter - so what is said cannot be ignored. Therefore, this topic is certainly something that should get the attention of state AGs as part of an overall solution to tamping down on this type of bad business practice. It is no secret the cognitive dissonance that is practiced by the vast majority of timeshare sales organizations as compared to their customer service and resort management organizations - and big picture - this type of thing has to come to an end one way or another. Wyndham is among them.
@TUGBrian recently posted this article highlighting exactly this outcome for another smaller timeshare entity: https://tugbbs.com/forums/threads/f...-in-deceptive-sales-practices-lawsuit.344827/
If this type of case can be won in a court of law as above, then it starts to set a precedent - and that precedent is potentially very important big picture. We want to see more of these types of legal wins - not less. So with this in mind, I agree with the sentiment expressed by @rickandcindy23 - especially given many of these sales made are to people over the age of 62 - which brings into specific focus elder abuse laws. Until we hold the timeshare companies accountable for their bad business sales practices - nothing is going to change - and a part of that accountability is bringing suits against these companies - and having state AGs take a serious look at the elder abuse aspects and the deceptive sales practices is a mandatory part of bringing change to a market segment that is ripe for such change for many reasons.