Blocked from checking in – but charged anyway

quarterQuestion: I don’t know where else to turn. I recently booked a room at the Holiday Inn French Quarter-Chateau Lemoyne in New Orleans through its central reservations phone number.

When I arrived, the New Orleans Police Department had the entire block closed off. I immediately called the hotel and told a manager I couldn’t access the hotel. He said he did not know when the blockade would be lifted and couldn’t help get my car or luggage to the hotel.

He couldn’t cancel my reservation because I had made it through Holiday Inn’s central reservations number. After several more attempts to reach the hotel, he agreed to help me cancel my reservation. I stayed at another hotel that night.

Three days later, a $113 charge appeared on my credit card from the Holiday Inn. I disputed the charge, but they told me I couldn’t get a refund because I could not prove that they refused me the room. When I called guest relations they said they needed a cancellation number before they would consider a refund. Otherwise the hotel itself would need to reverse the charge. When I call the hotel, I get only voicemail. Can you help? — Gabriel Medina, Elk Grove, Calif.

Answer: If a hotel representative says your reservation is canceled, you shouldn’t be charged for your stay.

But a review of your correspondence raises a few red flags. First, a manager told you that it was impossible for him to cancel a reservation made through Holiday Inn’s 800-number. Then, a few minutes later, the same manager agrees to “help” you cancel the reservation.

I would assume that “helping” you means your reservation is officially canceled, but what if he just looked into it and then decided it couldn’t be done, and left your original reservation intact? Since Holiday Inn didn’t have a cancellation number, it probably means there was no cancellation.

Here’s what you did right: You noted the name of the manager with whom you spoke. You followed up with Holiday Inn, and you were persistent but polite.

Here’s what you overlooked: You should have called the central reservations number and asked for a cancellation number. If they refused to give you a number, you should have given a representative the name of the manager you spoke with. I would have followed up with the manager and not let Holiday Inn off the hook until you had a number.

But getting a number isn’t enough. Instead of continuing to call Holiday Inn, I would have sent it a short, cordial email asking for a verification of your cancellation in writing. If you send an email through a hotel company’s Website (Holiday Inn’s is here.) you’ll typically receive a meaningful answer in a matter of days, if not hours.

With that information, your credit card dispute would have probably been a slam-dunk.

Before getting to the resolution on your case, let me add one more thing. As far as I can tell, Holiday Inn was under no obligation to refund your money. You couldn’t reach the hotel because of a police barricade, which the property couldn’t control. But since a manager assured you that he would help you make a cancellation, I think it’s reasonable to expect a refund.

I contacted Holiday Inn on your behalf. It reviewed your case and apologized for the way in which your refund was handled. “Clearly the inability to access the hotel was beyond your control, and in as such, you should be relieved of the $113 charge you have received,” a representative wrote to you in a letter. You’re getting your $113 back.

(Photo of New Orleans’ French Quarter by Jim Nix/Flickr Creative Commons)

  • Lisa S

    Just a little curious about police blockades: Did the police blockade trap all the people inside the hotel as well as prevent people from reaching the hotel? Given that we like to say America is a free country, can people’s movement legally be restricted for 12 or 24 hours? I know that the government might restrict movement in the case of riots, but I haven’t heard of any political uprising in New Orleans in the last couple of years. Aren’t there other Holiday Inn hotels in New Orleans to which this person could have been directed while the blockade was in force? Seems like the manager and Holiday Inn could have said that while they had no control over the police department blockading the area, they could make sure that their guest was able to check into a hotel, say the Holiday Inn Express that is one block from the French Quarter. It might not have been the hotel the guest really wanted, but it would have been a very courteous, hospitable offer–and maybe they could have knocked a few dollars off the price. Of course, I don’t know the ins and outs of the hotel industry, and perhaps the hotels have different owners and are in direct competition or maybe there weren’t any rooms available. It just seems that neither this particular hotel nor Holiday Inn Central were very proactive when it learned a guest couldn’t get to the hotel, yet the hotel was very reluctant to give up the revenue.

  • Bob

    I ran into a New Orleans police blockade at a hotel in 1980. A business organization I belonged to (rather a fun bunch) had scheduled a meeting there during the run-up to Mardi Gras. When I went to check out of the meeting hotel, one of the Mardi Gras “krewes” had reserved the street to assemble a parade, so there was no traffic in or out, and the hotel wasn’t running their free airport shuttle. I could have gotten a cab by carrying my luggage a few blocks, but I didn’t have enough cash for it, the hotel wouldn’t cash a check because I didn’t have an AmEx, and this was in the era before ATMs and cabs that took credit cards. So I missed my flight home.

    @Lisa S: In my case, foot traffic wasn’t restricted at all. That may or may not have been the case with Mr. Medina’s situation.

    Even if he could walk to the hotel, it’s also not clear to me whether he could have reasonably parked his car elsewhere and carried his luggage to the hotel. Street parking, even temporarily, isn’t really an option in the French Quarter. Google Maps shows several commercial parking lots/garages within a few blocks of his hotel, but perhaps they’re filled up by monthly arrangements – not being a New Orleans local, I couldn’t say, but that’s the case in some lots in San Francisco where I am a local.

  • Lisa S

    @Bob: thanks for the information. It seems the NOPD ought to inform business affected by blockades that this is going to happen so that alternative arrangements for guests/clients can be made.

  • Kathleen

    If the police blockade was not created for criminal justice reasons, wouldn’t the hotel and other residents of the street been notified. Shouldn’t the hotel then inform its soon-to-arrive guests that access by car and with luggage would be difficult.

    Whatever the reason for the blocade, couldn’t the hotel have organized parking for guests and had bellmen with rolling carts available to fetch luggage? Wouldn’t anybody manage a hotel develop a strategy to cope with the situation other than just keeping the money?

    New Orleans is a big tourist town — it just seems strange that a source of revenue like tourism would be so totally disregarded by the police or the hotel–is there more to this story?