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AOPA credit card --- WARNING.



 
 
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  #1  
Old November 28th 04, 05:46 AM
Jay Honeck
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I've twice been on the reverse side of this situation where a hotel
gave me a guaranteed reservation and then failed to hold a room
available. Once the room had been reserved with either Visa or
Mastercard and the hotel basically told us that we were on our own
but could use the pay phone in the lobby to search for another place
to stay. Complaining later to the credit card company got us
nowhere. The other time an AMEX card had been used to hold the
reservation and the treatment was quite different. They
apologized for having overbooked, arranged transportation to
another hotel and paid for my first night's stay there plus a few
free phone calls so I could let others know where I was staying.
I heard similar stories from others and apparently AMEX had a
much stricter policy of making both the hotels and customers
adhere to the guaranteed reservation policies.


Amex had nothing to do with it. You just found a hotel that unscrupulously
overbooks, but still has a conscience about doing so.

Unscrupulous hotels that over-book are trying to fight the no-show/bogus
reservation problem by playing the odds, rather than getting guaranteed
reservations and following through with charging no-shows. When everyone
actually shows up, someone gets screwed. You were "it" that night.

We NEVER over-book. Since each suite is unique, represents a different era
of aviation history, and is often specifically requested, it's pretty tough
to substitute one suite for another. Thus, with a guaranteed reservation,
that suite is yours -- no matter when you show up.

But, on the flipside, in exchange for this kind of service we will charge
you if you don't show up -- period.

One exception that ONLY pilots receive: If you are flying in, and
conditions drop to below VFR minimums anywhere along your route of flight,
you may cancel up to 6 PM without penalty. This "IFR Cancellation Policy"
has proven to be VERY popular with our private pilot guests, as you can
imagine! (We instituted it after running into hotel issues ourselves over
the years. Face it, flying a light plane isn't the most reliable form of
transportation, and thus we ended up never making hotel reservations in
advance, for fear of being charged for no-showing. This resulted in some
nasty sleeping experiences, on occasion, when we couldn't find a decent
hotel room.)
--
Jay Honeck
Iowa City, IA
Pathfinder N56993
www.AlexisParkInn.com
"Your Aviation Destination"


  #2  
Old November 28th 04, 06:30 AM
Peter
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Jay Honeck wrote:

I've twice been on the reverse side of this situation where a hotel
gave me a guaranteed reservation and then failed to hold a room
available. Once the room had been reserved with either Visa or
Mastercard and the hotel basically told us that we were on our own
but could use the pay phone in the lobby to search for another place
to stay. Complaining later to the credit card company got us
nowhere. The other time an AMEX card had been used to hold the
reservation and the treatment was quite different. They
apologized for having overbooked, arranged transportation to
another hotel and paid for my first night's stay there plus a few
free phone calls so I could let others know where I was staying.
I heard similar stories from others and apparently AMEX had a
much stricter policy of making both the hotels and customers
adhere to the guaranteed reservation policies.



Amex had nothing to do with it. You just found a hotel that unscrupulously
overbooks, but still has a conscience about doing so.


This was at least a couple decades ago and I believe that
AMEX had everything to do with it. At that time AMEX was
in a very strong position in the hotel industry and was
reported to revoke their arrangements with hotels that
didn't honor their reservations. No idea what the current
policies are since the relative influence of AMEX vs. other
card providers has changed rather dramatically.

  #3  
Old November 29th 04, 03:16 AM
David Lesher
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"Jay Honeck" writes:


Amex had nothing to do with it. You just found a hotel that unscrupulously
overbooks, but still has a conscience about doing so.


I disagree. It's my understanding tha AMEX really holds the
line on denied rooms; the original hotel eats the cost of
the replacement room, or they lose their merchant account.

Of course, it's possible that likely everything else about Amex;
this is now watered down, and/or not the case at all any more.

[There was a time Amex was really useful -- they got me a new card
the same day, in Guatemala City, on a US holiday.]

--
A host is a host from coast to
& no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX
Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433
is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433
  #4  
Old November 30th 04, 01:39 PM
Cub Driver
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On Mon, 29 Nov 2004 03:16:22 +0000 (UTC), David Lesher
wrote:

I disagree. It's my understanding tha AMEX really holds the
line on denied rooms; the original hotel eats the cost of
the replacement room, or they lose their merchant account.


The only time I was ever denied a room (members of a convention had
overstayed their reservations, and it is against the law in DC to
evict a tenant willing to pay for his room), the hotel called a taxi,
gave five dollars to the driver, and instructed him to take me to a
sister hotel, where I had a much finer room than I would have been
willing to pay for.

all the best -- Dan Ford
email: (put Cubdriver in subject line)

Warbird's Forum
www.warbirdforum.com
Piper Cub Forum www.pipercubforum.com
the blog www.danford.net
  #5  
Old November 30th 04, 02:16 PM
Ron Natalie
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Cub Driver wrote:
On Mon, 29 Nov 2004 03:16:22 +0000 (UTC), David Lesher
wrote:


I disagree. It's my understanding tha AMEX really holds the
line on denied rooms; the original hotel eats the cost of
the replacement room, or they lose their merchant account.



The only time I was ever denied a room


I had the Baltimore Hyatt (a dump by the way) try to deny me a
room once. I pointed out that I had reserved it on my AMEX and
oddly one of their "reserve" rooms became available. AMEX has
good customer support people. They were the easiest by far
to dispute a charge (which I have done twice).

Plenty of people willing to offer me credit, those who have crappy
support, get the Scissor treatment. I usually have a few in the
drawer because they were giving something away for enrolling (Margy
needed at hat at Oshkosh once so we got EAA Visa cards lying around
in the drawer). It's only once in a great while that someone will
notice that I have NEVER charged anything on their cards and inquire
or cancel the card over it.
  #6  
Old November 30th 04, 03:20 PM
John Harlow
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Plenty of people willing to offer me credit, those who have crappy
support, get the Scissor treatment. I usually have a few in the
drawer because they were giving something away for enrolling (Margy
needed at hat at Oshkosh once so we got EAA Visa cards lying around
in the drawer).


For those interested in improving their credit ratings: it can be
detrimental to have several open credit lines (with balances or not) as
potential lenders will consider the possibility of you running up balances
and not being able to pay their debt back. Make sure you call credit card
companies you have unnecessary credit with and cancel directly with them -
cutting up the card isn't good enough.


  #7  
Old November 30th 04, 04:19 PM
Newps
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John Harlow wrote:

Plenty of people willing to offer me credit, those who have crappy
support, get the Scissor treatment. I usually have a few in the
drawer because they were giving something away for enrolling (Margy
needed at hat at Oshkosh once so we got EAA Visa cards lying around
in the drawer).



For those interested in improving their credit ratings: it can be
detrimental to have several open credit lines (with balances or not) as
potential lenders will consider the possibility of you running up balances
and not being able to pay their debt back. Make sure you call credit card
companies you have unnecessary credit with and cancel directly with them -
cutting up the card isn't good enough.


Actually it's the opposite. You do not want to be closing down a bunch
of cards where the only reson is you don't need it. Do a google search
on credit rating. Saw a guy on TV explain it. The new system values
the amount of time each of your accounts has been open. A bunch of
accounts open a short time and then closed is very bad. In fact a
twentysomething kid is not able to get as high a credit score as an
average 50 something simply because of the time factor.
  #8  
Old November 30th 04, 04:44 PM
John Harlow
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Default



For those interested in improving their credit ratings: it can be
detrimental to have several open credit lines (with balances or not)
as potential lenders will consider the possibility of you running up
balances and not being able to pay their debt back. Make sure you
call credit card companies you have unnecessary credit with and
cancel directly with them - cutting up the card isn't good enough.


Actually it's the opposite. You do not want to be closing down a
bunch of cards where the only reson is you don't need it. Do a
google search on credit rating. Saw a guy on TV explain it. The new
system values the amount of time each of your accounts has been open.
A bunch of accounts open a short time and then closed is very bad. In fact
a twentysomething kid is not able to get as high a credit
score as an average 50 something simply because of the time factor.


Yes, a few long term, responsibly used accounts will improve a rating, but a
dozen stagnent accounts with potentially high debt loads can be seen as a
liablility, plus exposes one to identity theft...

http://www.creditcards.com/dos-and-d...177692a3f5 c8


  #9  
Old December 1st 04, 12:15 AM
Matt Whiting
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Default

Newps wrote:


John Harlow wrote:

Plenty of people willing to offer me credit, those who have crappy
support, get the Scissor treatment. I usually have a few in the
drawer because they were giving something away for enrolling (Margy
needed at hat at Oshkosh once so we got EAA Visa cards lying around
in the drawer).




For those interested in improving their credit ratings: it can be
detrimental to have several open credit lines (with balances or not)
as potential lenders will consider the possibility of you running up
balances and not being able to pay their debt back. Make sure you
call credit card companies you have unnecessary credit with and cancel
directly with them - cutting up the card isn't good enough.



Actually it's the opposite. You do not want to be closing down a bunch
of cards where the only reson is you don't need it. Do a google search
on credit rating. Saw a guy on TV explain it. The new system values
the amount of time each of your accounts has been open. A bunch of
accounts open a short time and then closed is very bad. In fact a
twentysomething kid is not able to get as high a credit score as an
average 50 something simply because of the time factor.


So is having a bunch of accounts open! My understanding is that the
credit score factors in not only your current level of debt and your
payment history, but also the amount of debt that you could quickly accrue.


Matt

  #10  
Old November 29th 04, 06:32 AM
David Lesher
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Posts: n/a
Default


"Jay Honeck" writes:


Amex had nothing to do with it. You just found a hotel that unscrupulously
overbooks, but still has a conscience about doing so.


It's my understanding that AMEX really holds the line on denied
rooms; the original hotel eats the cost of the replacement room, or
they lose their merchant account.

Of course, it's possible that like everything else about Amex; this
is now watered down, and/or not the case at all any more.

[There was an era when Amex was really useful -- they got me a new
card the same day, in Guatemala City, on a US holiday.]

--
A host is a host from coast to
& no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX
Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433
is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433
 




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