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Posts Tagged ‘hotel’

Ode to the best mini-bar ever

Oct 3rd, 2009 Posted in Uncategorized, musings | No Comments »

IMGP0912

Ode to you mini-bar at the James Hotel in Chicago. If you be called ‘mini’ then I can only wonder what a ‘grand’ bar in a hotel room would look like. You were stocked with five bottles of high quality spirits, a fridge full of mixers and other liquors, and all the equipment necessary to mix and enjoy any cocktail imaginable. Yes, your prices were high, but you’re a “mini-bar”. But comedians need fall back jokes, and if you weren’t expensive and airlines didn’t serve peanuts, then what would they joke about? The greatest shame was that I couldn’t take advantage of your bounty. I was in Chicago for work, and lacked the opportunity to imbibe you delicious nectar. Next time James mini-bar. Next time.

This could suck

May 11th, 2009 Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »

A number of cities, states, etc, are getting together for a class action lawsuit against online hotel booking companies. You know, the ones that let us search all hotels in the city and find the best deal and fits our needs best. Those ones. CNN explains why:

Here’s what all the fuss is about. Say a customer walks into a hotel and rents a $100 room for the night. On the bill, of course, the hotel will add a charge representing whatever the local town’s occupancy tax is – let’s say 6%. In this example, the customer pays $106, and the municipality gets $6. Now suppose the same customer rents the same room using an online travel company. The OTC and hotel typically have a deal under which the OTC agrees to list the room at a minimum retail price fixed by the hotel – say, again, $100 – though the hotel will only actually charge the OTC a discounted rate, say $80. The difference between the tax on $100 and $80 is the crux of the dispute.

The actual room rental paid by the OTC to the hotel is $80, so the OTCs treat that discounted price as the one subject to the local occupancy tax. The other $20, they argue, is compensating the OTC for its online services, not the hotel for its room. Accordingly, the OTC remits only $4.80 in taxes (6% of $80) to the hotel, which, in turn, forwards that sum to the municipality. So this time the customer still pays $106, but the municipality gets only $4.80 instead of $6.

The doom and gloom ending to the article is that simply to fight the lawsuit, some of the booking companies could go bankrupt. Pretty crap deal.

There are a couple of things that I don’t understand about why cities would want to do this here and now. It would seem to me that online booking services facilitate more tourists coming to your city. I’m sure that if you sue the company that’s sending people your way, they’re not going to be so keen to list you on their site. Meaning fewer tourists. Second, isn’t this the way that all tour operators and travel agents always work? I may be way off, but it would make sense that people booking the room should only pay tax on what they pay for the room. The revenue that they make for their service will then be taxed separately. I’m all for taxing the hell out of thing that have a externalized cost to society, but what’s the cost here? Why should this be taxed twice?.

Here’s to hoping that the online booking folks win. I’ve been using them for years and they’ve been invaluable for finding a place to crash in certain parts of the world.

It’s worth joining the mailing list

Jan 29th, 2009 Posted in tips | No Comments »

Apparently I missed a £1 hotel room sale this morning at a swanky hotel in London. Which remind me that it’s worth joining hotel, airline, and destination mailing lists. You never know what type of sales and events you’ll be alerted too. Of course you also have to check the account you use to sign up with. I didn’t. Oops.

Slope Side

Dec 21st, 2008 Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

le Plagne 1800

One of the first major differences I’ve noticed between Le Plagne an other ski areas I’ve stayed is the abundance of slope side accommodation. There are hotels in what I would consider to be the middle of the ski slope. And at the bottom, you have places like where I’m staying, the 2nd building from the right in the picture. This is cheap budget accommodation with 4 people in bunk bends in rooms smaller than my first year dorm room at college. It blows my mind that places like this have ski-in ski-out access as the only places I’ve seen in the states with that type of access to the slopes are the most upmarket of hotels. Score one point for the Alps.