I'm less than two weeks hosting. A guest booked for one nigh...
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I'm less than two weeks hosting. A guest booked for one night. He checked into a wrong and occupied room. I relocated him to ...
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Reservation made two weeks ago, host appears to have decided that new EU rules means that people from the US should not travel from England or somesuch (despite not having been in the US for some time). Host has kept listing active for dates.
Thoughts? It's still 3 weeks out but pricing has gone up and options have gone down significantly. No additional fee was provided with auto-refund, Twitter and email have received no reply, ABB Superhost hotline is backed up 45 minutes.
@Kenneth12 I did read that several EU countries have banned people coming in from the US, UK, Brazil, places where the COVID infections are high. If that's the case, I don't see anything wrong with the host keeping the listing open for those dates for guests who are not from countries which are on that list.
That is not the case. The EU Commission has recommended restricting entry at many points (such as direct via air) for individuals who have been in certain (most) countries such as the US and Mexico in the past 14 days. France's "air bridges" to the UK and elsewhere are open to individuals of all nationalities; nation of origin has nothing to do with it and should not be being used as a criteria to discriminate against guests otherwise legally in a country and observing local restrictions.
France is currently fully open for entry of non-French nationals from elsewhere inside the European space.
@Kenneth12 I will agree with you that this is not a reason to cancel the reservation. The host can't know how the guest will enter the country. It's not a reason to cancel just because the guest is US citizen.
The EU is quite rightly taking a measured approach to ease restrictions put in place to help manage the COVID pandemic. As part of the easing of travel restrictions it is now allowing 14 countries entry which are considered safe as they are managing their outbreaks. Countries like the US, Brazil and Russia which are still sadly subject to rising rates of infections and death are not considered safe.
@Kenneth12 Was the host granted a no-penalty cancellation under Extenuating Circumstances?
It sure sounds as though you're winding up for a Discrimination complaint because you're hungry for revenge and/or compensation. I don't agree with this reading of what happened. The host may have acted out of an imperfect understanding of the ever-changing travel restrictions - particularly the policy that went into effect on 1 July - but it's not evident that this reflects a pattern of bias against Americans.
In general I don't think hosts should assume the role of border guards, but Airbnb backs hosts into a corner when it grants guests full refunds even at the last minute because of new travel restrictions. And as governments shift priority from fighting the virus to rebuilding the economy, the decisions about how to reduce risk in our households, businesses, and communities are being left to individuals. As humans we're not very good at analyzing risk, so some flawed decisions are inevitable.
Hi @Anonymous,
Thanks for your reply and I appreciate the input.
@Anonymous wrote:
@Kenneth12 Was the host granted a no-penalty cancellation under Extenuating Circumstances?
They may have been but I have no reason to suspect that is the case.
It sure sounds as though you're winding up for a Discrimination complaint because you're hungry for revenge and/or compensation. I don't agree with this reading of what happened. The host may have acted out of an imperfect understanding of the ever-changing travel restrictions - particularly the policy that went into effect on 1 July - but it's not evident that this reflects a pattern of bias against Americans.
We don't need to establish a "pattern" here, do we?
The host had a moderate cancellation policy. Most listings I see in Paris now (which are alas, more costly and more spartan and most importantly, further away from the memorial service I'm there to attend), have a fully flexible cancellation policy.
The host frankly just became increasingly weird and combatative ...
In general I don't think hosts should assume the role of border guards, but Airbnb backs hosts into a corner when it grants guests full refunds even at the last minute because of new travel restrictions. And as governments shift priority from fighting the virus to rebuilding the economy, the decisions about how to reduce risk in our households, businesses, and communities are being left to individuals. As humans we're not very good at analyzing risk, so some flawed decisions are inevitable.
I also agree with you that hosts, indeed, should not be taking on the role of border guards. I'd have no problem in the end with a host reporting violations of local restrictions to authorities, but interpreting and enforcing goes a little far-- especially when you're wrong about the terms.
In this case, I made a reservation under moderate cancellation terms. Host accepted reservation (no IB). That's what I expected to get; I could have chosen a flexible choice but the host's offer was attractive enough in location for me to take moderate cancellation when many fully flexible options were available.
Days later, yes with then-coming July 1st announcement in the background, host became combative and wrote "you're from Chicago, you know you won't be able to enter?" (We have listings in Chicago, we live in Mexico City ... and I assure you, I know the rules and discussions far more than this host).
It went on from there and IMO became inappropriate and was getting to the point where I would have been uncomfortable staying, regardless, based on the host's aggressive and inappropriate messaging. This is a trip I could request use of a diplomatic passport for, (thus producing a lot of last-minute rush work for a lot of people including myself); when I book, I expect a host to follow the set rules, not engage in some weird form of 20 questions and providing odd moralistic and other advise and interpretation/argumentation about travel regulations that consumes my time and distracts from obligations.
I also get another few hours of searching for another appropriate place, while staring down various deadlines and critical projects, when I spent more time looking for the best-located, best-match place three-plus weeks ago. (Of note: the apartment has a critical health amenity which is hard to locate, and I'm unlikely to find at this point, which causes a lot of disruption).
I have FlyerTalk and other forums for that and the discussion is usually more respectful and certainly tends to be more accurate. Unless the host is asked for advice on local restrictions (a host might discretely inquire if advice is needed...), it's not IMO their place: just provide the service contracted.
Months ago, we also had quite a few people here talking about refusing Chinese travellers in a variety of circumstances, including merely based on their name or photo regardless of travel history. Frankly that was disgusting and in violation of inclusion principles. While the people involved may or may not have had any previous bias against people from China, such situations provide an opportunity to create and construct bias via discriminatory actions.
I will not begin to summarize statements on Facebook Airbnb forums, but they were not pretty. If I were a guest from China and a US resident, having listings in Florida closed to me, or a reservation cancelled-- and I assure you, that happened and hosts on FB forums talked about doing it-- would be a notable pain and loss, and is certainly the worst of discrimination.
Whatever the host's motivation, bias is systematic not personal and refusing guests based on the guest's perceived home country or similar seems to me both discriminatory, and a violation of ABB's inclusion and non-discrimination policies, however one tries to justify it.
You don't have the messaging in front of you, but my Spidey Sense, as we put it around here, was that it was weird and inappropriate. As a result of hosts actions, I'm going to wind up paying half a grand more, and being a 15-minute walk away from the single event we're there to attend, rather than a three minute hop.
So yes, mistakes and misinterpretations happen, but with the background of protests in the US, oft-times discrimination of all types is brushed under the rug as "just misunderstanding." (If a host isn't willing to accept their own cancellation policy, they shouldn't be using it; if they want strict then they should be using strict.)
Thus I have questions about whether the host should be on the platform and think that some compensation from them or ABB is indeed appropriate in the situation.
Quick update: ABB's support queue is fairly long right now, Support has now gotten back to me and been entirely helpful.
Host has kept listing active for dates.
How does that happen, if you know? My understanding would be that if the host cancels - despite the EC cancellation policy of no penalties and no charges - still blocking the calendar exists?
Quite easily @Ian-And-Anne-Marie0 🙂
If a host has to cancel because of country covid restrictions to guests from certain countries, it doesn't mean they can't have their listing open to guests from other countries which these restrictions don't apply to.
So if the UK brings in travel restrictions and say doesn't allow US travellers and as a result you have to apply EC to cancel said guest, your calendar would remain open to guests you can accept.
Last week, I almost completed a Host side Covid cancellation. We're told "No penalties", "No charges". Near the end of the process the host is told "Your calendar will be blocked". This wasn't negotiable, and wouldn't be the sort of thing expected if any other host cancelled. The onus of a cancellation from overseas would be on the guest to cancel not the host, so that's what I was questioning.
Only the guest would know his/her responsibilities, for instance, we have an American family visiting next week. They're touring the UK after working and living here for 2 years. Did @Kenneth12 provide a travel itinerary to his Parisian host from where he was travelling from for that sort of decision to be made?
It is conceivable that the host would prefer a native national over a foreign traveler to avoid the likelihood of a last minute travel cancellation, but when do hosts ever get to decide that and keep their calendar open?
Your explanation makes sense, but when ever has that sense ever applied to Airbnb?
@Ian-And-Anne-Marie0 :
Were you using an EC cancellation? I thought those only applied pre-March 15th, or was the reservation outstanding?
AFAICT this reservation was not subject to EC. I don't know how the host cancelled (with penalty, perhaps?). Perhaps it is possible to open the dates after they are blocked, as it is with declined reservations?
Sorry you are wrong. @Kenneth12 If the host is not allowed by their government to accept guests with US passports from travelling to their country then they absolutely can ask Airbnb to cancel the booking under EC circumstances.
Just as hosts in the US were able to ask for bookings from guests arriving from China and Europe to be cancelled when your president banned travelled from those countries during the Covid.
Interested in how you were able to book STRs/hotels in the UK during Covid when they were banned by our government?
@Helen3 : we were talking, however, about a French host refusing individuals travelling through the UK, who are fully legally on French soil. (Not that hosts are immigration authorities, either, except in regimes such as the PRC).
I'm sorry there's an error in my title, this cancellation was closer to three weeks from check-in. Hotels and ABBs have been open for booking during non-excluded dates since the June 15th changes; and of course, one may have friends, family, colleagues, academic associations and clubs with housing, and a number of other options.
Were you using an EC cancellation? I thought those only applied pre-March 15th, or was the reservation outstanding?
It was for a guest who had all the excuses ready, procrastinated for over a month then ‘said’ she had cancelled and was needing to provide some evidence, which finally arrived. The ‘evidence’ wasn’t necessary from my point of view it was only for AirBnb’s benefit of providing travel vouchers instead of cash.
(It was post July 4th before July 32st).
Meanwhile, time ticking away, my calendar is blocked while AirBnb play their games.