I love talking about local hidden gems, great food spots, an...
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I love talking about local hidden gems, great food spots, and sharing travel tips. Whether it’s recommendations for nearby at...
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Hello everyone,
My name is Aisling and I manage our global Community Support Team. Over the past three months, we have been hit by an unprecedented wave of challenges due to the spread of COVID-19.
My job is to ensure that you and the rest of our community have the support you need, especially at this difficult time and make sure we have the resources in place to do so. However, at a time where support is needed even more than ever, our team has been faced with some of the hardest challenges we’ve ever experienced.
In light of this, I wanted to share some of these experiences with you and most importantly what we’ve been doing about it and what we are currently working on.
Sudden and unprecedented volume of calls
As you may know, we have offices and support centers in locations across the world, but we rely on all of them to help with the volume of support we receive. The challenges we’ve seen here are:
What’ve we done:
Office shutdowns
As the virus spread, all of our internal offices were required to shut down quite abruptly and all of our teams had to change to a work from home mode.
What’ve we done:
Where are we now
We’ve done a lot in a short period of time, but as you can imagine we are still working through our backlog.
We also launched a new initiative that temporarily redeploys Airbnb staff to the Community Support team to help us more quickly meet your needs. Things are moving rapidly and so we hope you see a difference in response time very shortly.
Finally...
I am incredibly proud of how our teams have rallied together in such a short amount of time to serve our community and we are all working around the clock to continue to support you.
I can’t imagine how difficult it has been for all of you with these unprecedented changes. We are here to listen and support you as much as we can. Please continue to share your feedback here in the Community Center and also through the listening sessions, I've been receiving regular updates from the community team. I will keep you posted with further updates.
Thank you for your support and patience while we get our team back on track and adjust to this new world.
Aisling
My Visa won't refund me on $300 museum tickets for a museum that was closed and show that was cancelled because the museum had a no cancellation policy, so....
I have put in for a cancellation for my stay and the owner emailed me back and denied it. My trip was scheduled for 4/17/20 to 4/20/20. Reading the cancellation policy i have cancelled way in advance. I cancelled on March 23rd. Please let me know where to go from here to received a full refund.
Thank you
****
*[Personal information hidden for safety reasons–in line with the Community Center Guidelines]
Hi, Sorry but the extenuating circumstances only now applies to trips till April 15. Yours is after that so the normal cancellation policy of the host will apply unless they agree to waive it.
Dear Aisling
Welcome to our community as community admin. We want fare and transparent discussion in our community. The community admin should look all the activity and take necessary action to resolve the all issue which time to time arise in Airbnb Community.
Now we are facing very big challenge globally and what we should do now or what is the next step should take by host or traveler we need guideline from you.
Thank you again to be part of our community.
Regards
Mizanur
well actually @Anonymous World health Organisation have failed miserably to protect the overall health of all those impacted on as it's our general health and economic health of all of us.
There's some good articles online including in The Telegraph, UK about that aspect of it and the WHO is legally obliged to factor into account this things, they haven't.
They have not bothered to consider the impact to everyone's mental well being with the displacement and disruption to the widercommunity.
We have laws in place for a very good reason.
I'm sorry but it's still summer weather here in New Zealand and if we all stayed indoors we will have brittles bones, obesity and other ailments.
One size doesn't fit all.
it's not the first time WHO have stuffed up and China should have blocked there border well prior to getting to the state it's in.
meanwhile you can think what you want about my going out to get fresh air, my health, including well functioning lungs for day to day life is equally important .
Sadly our current government have very few members who actually exercise out doors and then they tend to go running or cycling hence why they have given very limited options - Politicians are known to lack doing much exercise - many are ticking time bombs with health issues....
They would benefit from taking a leaf out of those who do their best to keep healthy - prevention is far better than cure.
My circle includes an essential service provider who is going through challenging times so we support each other 🤗
Keep healthy, write to your politicians, Heads of States and ask questions of them to adhere to the law themselves as they have not been doing so.
Our Ministry of Health / Minister of Health, have been advising Police what we can & can't do... we live in a democratic country with Laws...
The same thing is understood to also been done worldwide.
Since when have the Health Dep't been legally qualified to be above the law?
I have a practical question. I'm a host and have changed my cancellation policy to from STRICT to FLEXIBLE for the time being. Will this be applicable to my existing bookings? I'm doing it to allow my guests who've book through June to cancel and get a full refund -- this because the official cut-off date for extenuating circumstances is April 14. I'd cancel the bookings myself (though I, too, rely on the income) but the cost and potential removal of my listing makes that undesireable.
No doubt AirBnB will update that cut-off but meantime, will my Flexible cancellation policy help guests to cancel?
A difficult for ALL parties concerned and there are no simple solutions. Everyone will suffer one way or another. Stay safe and generous everyone.
no, when you change a policy it does not change existing reservation policies, only new ones.
Guests solidarity with hosts!
When Lea came to my apartment in Seville, her 5-year-old son had a high fever and was vomiting. Not speaking Spanish and not knowing anyone in this foreign city, she was very anxious. We immediately arranged to accompany her to the hospital, and two days later her son was cured and the whole family could enjoy their vacation.
This is what community means: to have someone to rely on at the other end of the world.
Guests have to know and understand that their hosts are ruined by Airbnb politic of 100% for the guests, 0% for the hosts.
We are loosing all our incomes, and for a lot of Airbnb hosts, these are their only incomes, and they have to pay credits, even for their houses. How are we going to survive to these enormous losses? And what about people who are cleaning the Airbnb rentals all over the world. Very often they have little money.
Airbnb speaks about SOLIDARITY, so why no solidarity between Airbnb, guests and hosts? Is it only for the show?
Why Airbnb doesn't do like VRBO? (credit valid 18 months).
(sorry for the language mistakes I am french)
Bon jour Catherine.
Your idea/definition of community: to have someone to rely on at the other end of the world.
The English definition of community: generally, the people living in one particular area or people who are considered as a unit because of their common interests, social group or nationality; specifically, a social media definition: a group of people who have similar interests or who want to achieve something together. If you extend the definition of community a little, it also included joint ownership, joint participation and joint liability.
There is much more dept to the word community, but the point is that your idea of community is definitely consistent with most people's idea of community, which is also consistent with that which is defined in the English language (and I am sure, equivalently, in your language).
Unfortunately, the founders at AirBNB speak a very different language, it would appear, as their idea of community is not consistent with what most people understand it to be. If you read their message to the hosts from 2 weeks ago (link: https://community.withairbnb.com/t5/Airbnb-Updates/A-Message-From-Our-Founders/m-p/1257606#M19152), they decided what was in the best interest of the global AirBNB community by allowing guests to cancel and get a 100% refund so as not to have guests making the decision to put themselves in unsafe situations and creating a public health hazard because of a commitment to their bookings. You should note, interestingly, that there was no mention of relief for hosts being committed to putting themselves in unsafe situations and creating a public health hazard either, nor was there any mention of hosts being caught in an unsafe or difficult situations due to Covid-19, other than to mention that the decision has caused incredible hardship for hosts. Hence, it is obvious that AirBNB founders view the AirBNB community differently from what most people understand community to be.
Following on from their message, the only help provided so far is to write to the US Congress to seek financial assistance for AirBNB hosts, and to have AirBNB hosts lobby their local government representative to pursue this assistance from the US Congress. Supposing they succeed, that still leaves hosts outside of the US without any financial assistance from the US Congress as I am pretty sure that any US support package would not be for the benefit of non-US citizens/residents. Again, AirBNB's founders' warped definition of community is evident - implement a global Extenuating Circumstances Policy (ECP), but offer local (US) suggestion to get financial relief. I don't think AirBNB founders will lobby the governments of France and Australia, or any other government, for that matter, to include AirBNB hosts in their respective countries' Covid-19 relief packages. So much for "we are partners. We will get through this together."
Besides the decision to write to the US Congress, there has been no further initiatives or communication from them. Interestingly, the community has time to start other threads to take us away from the gloom and doom of the current situation and of hosts clamouring for a response/refund from AirBNB, but no one is really addressing the situation of the hosts who are suffering greatly, and who are unlikely to get any relief from the US Congress.
Covid-19 is a global pandemic, and everyone is suffering. There are significant job losses, and this will filter through the economies of all nations. Most government packages try to spread the pain, and look for relief from all participants - citizens and residents - to share the pain and the relief efforts; not just one sector.
I think that there are an equal amount of guests out there who understand and support the hosts who are suffering as there are hosts who understand and support guests who are caught up in difficult situations, and if we, both guests and hosts, were given the ability to work out each and everyone of our individual situations, the majority of the situations would have been an amenable agreement between the 2, whether it be a 0% - 100% refund to guests, credits to guests, or instalment refund to guests etc. Yes, there will be some disagreements between guests and hosts, but if we believed that we had a real AirBNB community, such disagreements would be in the minority. Unless, of course, we never had a community in the first place.
There is no solidarity of community with AirBNB. As an email from their support team advised me when I queried why they decided what they decided on the global ECP, the response was that it was a business decision.
I can only wish you good luck, and to let you know that I have started (re-)building with other platforms. No use flogging a dead horse with AirBNB - they cannot turn back their decision (too many guest refunds already given out), and even if they could, they won't (too much effort to do so).
There is a whole list of other platforms here https://www.airbnbhell.com/airbnb-competitors/ that you can look at; but they all have their idiosyncrasies which means you can have a good or a bad experience - or both - with each and every platform. No one's perfect, but at least, it will give you a breather from a traitor until you think you can perhaps trust the traitor again.
All the best.
Please help me get my full refund of $152.72 back because my host is unresponsive and not honoring even the 50% refund cancellation policy. This is criminal!
@Lily368 Hi Lily, it is not criminal. You have to follow the process and be patient like everyone else.
Hi Juan,
I am being (and will be) patient with receiving my full refund. However, I should automatically receive my 50% refund minus the service fee when I canceled before a certain date. It is stated in their cancellation policy when I purchased the room. Correct me if I am wrong.
@Lily368 If you fall under the cancelation window then you should. Try to cancel and you should see what your reservation qualifies for.
@Lily368 Then I’m not sure why the complaining. You don’t need a hosts approval if you see you qualify for a 50% refund.