Travel Troubleshooter

  • Logout
  • Member Center

The travel troubleshooter

We got cold shoulder after winter storm

 

christopher@elliott.org

Q. We recently checked into the Holiday Inn Express Hotel Poulsbo in Poulsbo, Wash., and experienced a lapse in service. We need your help with a refund.

There was a winter storm with ice on the road, and after a treacherous drive from the Kingston Ferry, which was shut down after we disembarked because of wind, we arrived in Poulsbo. We checked into the hotel at 5:30 p.m. or so. At 6:45 p.m., the lights went out.

We thought that the power would come back on soon, but seeing that the power was off as far as we could see, we hunkered down. No one from the hotel came to our room to give us any information. The phones were out.

We had no heat, no hot water, no electricity and no hot breakfast as promised. When we checked out, an employee told us that he had no power to adjust our bill, but when the manager came in, and the power returned they would take care of it.

That didn’t happen. A manager offered a 25 percent discount off the room, and then raised it to 50 percent. We refused. We have tried to call Holiday Inn corporate, but were placed on “hold” for 75 minutes before being hung up on.

We paid $107 for a room without electricity, hot water or heat. Can you help us?

Jeri Kellerman

Saddleback Valley, Calif.

Holiday Inn should have apologized to you for the power outage and explained its refund policy when it offered a 25 percent refund (and later, a 50 percent refund). But did it owe you a full refund for one night’s stay?

I put that question to readers of my blog when your case first came to my attention. Some felt that the hotel wasn’t responsible for what appeared to be a regional power outage. Others indicated that a hotel like the Holiday Inn should have had a backup generator and was contractually obligated to provide services such as heat, electricity, hot water and breakfast.

Holiday Inn doesn’t mention anything about refunds in the event of a service failure on its website. “Depending on the rate type, if a reservation has been guaranteed by a deposit or prepayment, a full refund will be made if the reservation is cancelled prior to the cancellation policy per the hotel’s policy for that booking,” it says.

That’s practically unintelligible corporate-speak.

Here’s how I see it: Holiday Inn owed you something for failing to provide you with the service you expected. And the correct amount — again, in my estimation — is somewhere between the 50 percent refund it offered you and the full refund you were requesting.

Holiday Inn’s real failure was putting you on “hold” for more than an hour and then hanging up on you. That’s why I always recommend writing to the hotel instead of phoning. When you send an email to Holiday Inn on the corporate level, you’re creating a paper trail that you can easily forward to a supervisor — or to a consumer advocate.

Holiday Inn corporate was made aware of your grievance, and it sent you a check for the remaining 50 percent of your room. You’ve received a full refund.

dealsaver
The Miami Herald: Subscribe now!

More from
Travel Troubleshooter

  • The travel troubleshooter

    Insurance didn’t cover my cruise

    My condolences on your loss. In a perfect world, Princess would refund your cruise, no questions asked. But a look at the terms of your Princess Vacation Protection shows that, sadly, it is correct: The plan doesn’t cover or reimburse for any loss resulting from a pre-existing medical condition.

  • The travel troubleshooter

    Insurance wasn’t required — how about a refund?

    It sounds as if Budget pulled a fast one on your wife. The employee’s statements contradict the company’s own website, which clearly says the loss-damage waiver is optional, and “if you don’t need LDW, don’t buy it.”

  • The travel troubleshooter

    Hey, that’s not my chipped windshield

    Windshield damage from a pebble isn’t always visible when you return a vehicle, and a car rental company will replace the entire windshield after the crack begins to spread. So it’s possible that you didn’t notice the chip when you brought the car back to Thrifty.

Join the
Discussion

The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere in the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.

We have introduced a new commenting system called Disqus for our articles. This allows readers the option of signing in using their Facebook, Twitter, Disqus or existing MiamiHerald.com username and password.

Having problems? Read more about the commenting system on MiamiHerald.com.

Hide Comments

This affects comments on all stories.

Cancel OK
0 comments

  • Videos



  • Quick Job Search

Enter Keyword(s) Enter City Select a State Select a Category