The Guardian (Charlottetown)

British move to outlaw deception by U.K. hotel chains

- ARTHUR FROMMER SPECIAL TO SALTWIRE NETWORK

A British organizati­on that regulates hotels — it’s called the Competitio­n and Markets Authority (CMA) — has just taken steps to prevent U.K. hotels from using deceptive sales tactics. Its approach should surely be adopted by the Federal Trade Commission.

The Brits have won adoption of the new anti-deception rules by several gigantic hotel-booking organizati­ons that publish hotel vacancies on the internet. It’s expected that a great many more hotel bookers in Britain will comply with the same rules.

Those regulation­s are certainly unobjectio­nable by any honest firm. They begin by requiring all statements and advertisem­ents of hotel room costs to include all extra fees and charges, like so-called resort fees, taxes and the like. Currently, the U.S. hotel booking organizati­ons do not advise the traveller in advance of the existence of such extra fees, and most travellers are stupefied to learn upon checking out of the hotel that the charges they owe are far greater than they had expected.

Who could deny that the hotel guest is entitled to know about such charges in advance of making the booking?

The second major regulation adopted by the British is far more subtle. It is to outlaw the use of “pressure booking” tactics by the hotel. How many times have you been told when booking that only a few rooms remain available and there are six other people considerin­g a stay, so you’d better confirm the booking right away?

In actual fact, those six other people are not considerin­g a stay on the very same dates as your possible stay, but simply a stay at the same hotel for some other dates in the future. The most respectabl­e hotel organizati­ons make use of that falsehood, which will now be outlawed in Great Britain.

Surely these shady tactics should also be prevented by U.S. regulatory agencies. They are simply a few out of a great many more deceptions rampant in the U.S. hotel industry. Next time you use the internet to make a U.S. hotel booking, name these deceptions to the reservatio­ns agent and threaten to cancel the booking unless you are guaranteed that they are not being used.

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