San Francisco Chronicle

Rental is closed but Expedia won’t find replacemen­t

- By Christophe­r Elliott Christophe­r Elliott is the ombudsman for National Geographic Traveler magazine. E-mail: elliottc@gmail.com Twitter: @elliottdot­org

Q:A few months ago, my family and I booked a hotel and flights through Expedia for a trip from Cleveland to St. Lucia. We had a reservatio­n for a three-bedroom villa at Cotton Bay Village.

Earlier this week, I called the hotel to set up a few tours and was told that the property was closed for renovation­s and that they had notified Expedia almost a month ago.

We have called Expedia six times, and it hasn’t been able to find a comparable property. Each time we call, we get a different agent and supervisor, review the entire history and try — and fail — to find another property.

We still have no rental for the vacation. I would like someone who is further up the chain of command to help us. I need someone who can stay on the line, give his or her first and last name and contact informatio­n, and has the authority to approve the villa. With every day wasted, there are fewer properties available. Any assistance would be appreciate­d.

Susan Palmer, Cleveland

A: Expedia should have notified you of the property closure as soon as possible, not waited for you to find out by chance. Cotton Bay Village was nice enough to furnish you with a copy of the email it sent to Expedia, letting it know about the closure. There’s no excuse for the omission.

When you told Expedia about the closure — which you shouldn’t have had to do — it should have jumped on the problem and fixed it without you having to call back six times.

You asked for the name of someone with the authority to fix this. I publish the names on my site: www.elliott.org/ company-contacts. I’d recommend sending one of Expedia’s executive contacts a brief, polite e-mail asking him or her to find you a suitable replacemen­t. Oh, and try to stay off the phone. Why? There’s no way to prove a conversati­on hap- pened, apart from the notes a representa­tive might take during the call.

Bottom line: Expedia needed to make this its problem, not yours. Instead, it kept putting you off and giving you non-answers until you were finally out of patience.

This case made its way through our help forums on my site before coming to my desk. You can get fast answers to any consumer question on my forums (www.elliott.org/forum), day or night.

I contacted Expedia on your behalf. Your husband found another villa and called Expedia with the reservatio­n informatio­n. Several hours later, Expedia agreed to book your villa at the same rate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States