You’re one week away from a
dream dive trip when you learn
your flight’s been canceled due
to a political uprising at the other
end. Then you find out you can’t
even get all your money back.
Sounds like a nightmare ... but
nightmares, like dreams, can
come true. Just ask Undercurrent reader Tony Moats of Boulder,
Colorado .
Last spring Moats booked a
diving/kayaking trip to the
Solomon Islands through Great
Expeditions, a Longmont
Colorado dive agency. Moats’
dive buddy, Alexander, had just
charged nearly $5,200 on his
credit card for the two, when Air
Pacific canceled its flight to Fiji,
as well as the connection to the
Solomon Islands. You see, violence
had closed both airports.
At that point, Moats began
negotiating with Great
Expeditions owner Marjanna
Helwig for a refund, though
Alexander had signed a booking
form containing a disclosure that
read, “Once reservations are paid
in full, entire package is NONREFUNDABLE.”
Negotiations dragged on
while Helwig attempted to
recoup the money she’d forw a r ded
to various suppliers. Several
months later, after being fully
reimbursed herself, Helwig wrote
to Moats and Alexander: “Despite
our written policy that all services
are non-refundable once paid in
full, under the circumstances we
were able to credit back the
majority of your trip costs. Per
our policy a 20 percent fee has
been retained. I regret I am
unable to offer a 100 percent
refund for the unfortunate circumstances
that caused your cancellation.
However, Great
Expeditions cannot be financially
responsible for whatever circumstances
that may cause a loss of
service for travelers.” The 80 percent
refund was processed directly
to Alexander’s credit card.
Moats felt 20 percent was
excessive, but when he complained,
Helwig explained that
this was a standard practice to
cover out-of-pocket costs such as
credit card overhead and staff
time spent planning the custom
itinerary. Even so, nowhere was it
written in Great Expeditions’
material. She did suggest that if
Moats were to book another trip
with Great Expeditions, she’d be
willing to apply half the withheld
money to the new booking.
Scheduling problems and a
generally deteriorating relationship
led Moats to look elsewhere
when booking his next trip. But
he didn’t stop asking questions,
such as: “What IS ‘standard
industry practice’ regarding refunds
in such cases?”
Reader Ken Hares of San Jose
has raised similar concerns following
his experience with International
Diving Expeditions of
Murietta, CA. After booking a trip
to the Malaysia Underwater Photo
and Video Contest through IDE in
1999, he was so delighted with his
visit to Sipadan and Mabul, that he,
his wife and two friends put down
deposits for the September 2000
competition as well. Then, after the
kidnaping at Sipadan that April, he
read State Department advisories
warning Americans not to travel
there in large groups. He asked IDE
if the Malaysian government could
ensure the group’s safety by providing
a military presence during the
event, and when no assurance
came, he canceled his reservations
in May 2000.
IDE owner Nadav Joshua pointed
out his company’s cancellation
fee policy: If a booking is canceled
between 90 and 180 days before
departure, the fee is one-third of
the entire trip price (NOT the
deposit amount). Hares and his
party of four had each put down
deposits of $500, or 15 percent of
the $3,000 trip price, so their entire
deposit was forfeited. Joshua tells us
he did offer to refund the entire
deposit if Hares were to re-book the
same trip the following year, and 50 percent if he booked a different
trip through IDE. But Hares felt
entitled to a full refund, and
eventually negotiations broke
down .
When Moats and Hares got
no satisfaction from their agents
or the major travel trade organizations,
they turned to
Undercurrent. As we learned, there
is no simple solution.
Linda High, director
of consumer affairs for
The American Society of
Travel Agents (ASTA ) ,
confirms that cancellation
policies vary from
agent to agent, and concedes
“there’s not a lot of
regulation of the travel
selling business.” In fact,
she s quick to point out
that ASTA, a voluntary trade association
made up of about 50 percent
of U.S. travel agents, is not a
regulatory agency, exercises no
control over its member agents,
and has no legal or enforcement
clout .
High advises that an agent’s
disclosures constitute a two-way
contract — obligating both the
agent and client to certain
responsibilities. When a client
signs a booking form, a check, or
a credit card slip after receiving
the agent’s disclosure statement,
it shows acceptance of all the
terms and conditions. Yet as Tony
Moats and Ken Hares learned,
written policies can be softened at
the discretion of the agent or
tour operator.
ASTA’s website carries a 13-
point code of ethics that only calls
for refunds due to substantial
changes in itinerary, services, features
or price that is within the
control of the operator. After
reviewing Moats’ negotiations
with Great Expectations, High
opined that Moats “did better
than he had any right to expect.”
Further, she adds, “Just because
you’re uncomfortable going to
your destination doesn’t mean
there won’t be a penalty,” if you
cancel .
The United States Tour
Operators Association also issues
“standards of integrity” for the
industry and consumers.
According to USTOA, acts of war,
rebellion, strikes and natural
catastrophes outside the control
of the tour operator fall into a
legal basket known as Force
Majeure. USTOA’s position is
that “Under ordinary legal principles
... the traveler is not entitled
to recompense from the tour
operator or supplier of a tour
component” if a tour is fully or
partially disrupted by such events.
Withholding 20 percent seems not
only excessive but also imprudent. In
a competitive customer service business
the smart thing would be to give
the client’s money back every time,
despite one’s written policies. |
Theoretically, then, clients
don’t seem to have a leg to stand
on. But in practice, the picture
isn’t as clear-cut. We ran these
cases by other industry experts,
and got mixed reactions. Travel
columnist Ed Perkins feels “a 20
percent penalty isn’t out of line
with the policies of other operators.”
However, Ken Knezick,
president of Island Dreams Tours
& Travel, disagrees. He points out
that the premium charged to
agents by credit card companies
(about 3.25 percent) only applies
to actual charges, and should
have been reversed when the
credit was issued. So withholding
20 percent seems not only excessive
to Knezick, but also imprudent.
“In a competitive customer
service business,” Knezick points
out, “the smart thing would be to
give the client’s money back every
time, despite one’s written policies.”
Because “you only make money in
this business when the customer
travels and comes back happy. ”
Knezick believes it would be worth
losing $1,000 rather than ticking off
a client, losing a potential long-term
relationship, and risking the
agency’s reputation among a tightknit
customer base.
Jenny Collister of Reef
& Rainforest, says that
“while each trip has its
own set of circumstances,
I try to do the right thing
when a trip is canceled
due to circumstances
beyond the client’s control.”
Although Reef &
Rainforest’s terms and
conditions state that
deposits are nonrefundable,
Collister credits the full deposit
toward another trip, once she’s
been reimbursed by her suppliers.
If that just isn’t feasible, she’ll generally
refund the deposit, minus a
$100 cancellation policy to cover
administrative costs. “After all,” she
points out, “we sometimes put in 50
hours planning a trip.”
Great Expeditions advises in its
disclosure: “It is your responsibility
to inquire about and fully understand
the change and cancellation
policies regarding your travel
arrangements. Travel insurance is
highly recommended.” But the travel
insurance offered by Great
Expeditions, Tripguard Plus, specifically
excludes coverage for losses
caused by or resulting from “war or
any act of war” whether declared or
not. (If the U.S. Congress can’t
define what an “act of war” is, what
is Tripguard’s criteria?)
On the other hand, CSA Travel
Protection DOES cover losses due to
terrorism, which it defines generally
as acts of violence intended to overthrow
or influence the control of
any government. However, CSA
corporate secretary Claudia Fullerton points out that “everyone
in the industry is struggling
with definitions like this,” and
that decisions are made case-bycase.
All the more reason for every
traveling diver to read and understand
the terms and conditions
put out by the travel agent, tour
operator, and travel insurance
carrier. But beyond the fine print,
do business with firms you can
trust to do the right thing. If
you’ve got such an agent already,
stick with that company. If you
don’t, check other divers, shops,
or clubs. Prepare a list of the
questions that concern you, and
don’t sign anything until you get
answers you understand and can
live with.
And keep in mind the old bromide,
“caveat emptor,” coined in
the sixteenth century — let the
buyer beware.