@Ute42 @Suzanne302 @Victoria567 @Robin4 @Kelly149
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The problem with facts is that they're stubborn things . . . so I've heard said.
Here is a fact: the newspaper pictured, a major metropolitian newspaper, the Boston Globe, published in a city aggressively trying to regulate AirBnB out of business, landed on my doorstep with this bold, above the fold story, dominating the front page, the lead story of the day.
Anyone who wishes to minimize this fact is welcome to do so, but to me it seems like denial.
Fact: The story appeared in the Globe long after the incidenct in July because, as the story clearly states, no refund was posted until the Globe reporter, Murphy, a consumer advocate, callled AirBnB, and they issued the $708 credit only a week ago. That's about 60+ days. It's unclear if they paid the $2500 yet after rejecting the $5000 request.
Fact: the couple requested $5000 compensation but AirBnB offered $2500 and five therapy sessions.
Opinion: that offer is a case of adding insult to injury.
Probable fact: had AirBnB handled this properly, in a timely fashion, chances are slim that this would have ended up as front page news and made its way across the nation and probably the world - that it did go nation-wide and most likely world-wide probably scared away many potential AirBnB clients and strengthened the argument against short- term rentals many cities are using to regulate AirBnB.
Bottom line: this should have been handled better and could have been handled better.
I hope that what come out of this is that the next time something atrocious happens AirBnb will do a better job of getting out ahead of it.
Fact: It would have been well worth the $5000 to avoid this "Front Page News".
How many hosts in Boston will now proudly admit that "I'm an airBnB host."