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Pond scum, maggets etc.

roofman

Jedi Knight
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That's about the nicest thing on this Forum I can call the California hotels charging $2000 PER NIGHT to folks displaced by the fires. Hopefully thier actions will prove to be criminal.
 
If that's true, I agree, that is just criminal. Where did you hear about this??
 
Outrageous, if true.

Even here in the third world, we have stiff price control
laws that automatically kick in 24 hours prior, during and
weeks after natural disasters.

0 % zero percentage markups allowed. Nada.

d
 
I have heard there were Hotels putting people up for free. Where did you hear this?
 
I heard it on CNN I believe a couple hours ago. They did not name them. They also showed some bed and breakfast taking in people for free or discounted rates.
 
Happens all the time and it is informative to me how other countries treat their citizens (or allow them to be treated).

I can't stand it when something is one price during the year but more expensive when there is something going on. It's the american way but still stinks.
 
It always amazes me how much a disaster brings out the worst in the human race and yet also brings out the best in the same said race. /bcforum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/confused.gif
 
We see it here in Florida every single time that a hurricane hits. Usually the first things to go up are gas and cigarettes. I usually get a couple of cartons (of smokes) a week or so before the storm hits.

People that have done it and been caught have paid some fines, but nothing else that I have heard of.
 
But, but..... Puerto Rico is part of the U.S. It's not a state but it is still U.S. territory.
They follow the same federal laws as we do here in "Da fiddy" It's just mail order suppliers that consider them a "forign country" go figure.....
Guranteed that hotel will pay heavily for that little trick. Price control or not we know how to handle parasites like that.
 
Yes.
Word of mouth can be the best advertisement or payback!
See democracy works, albiet sometimes not fast enough.
Dave
 
Hard to know what is really going on with the price gouging, could be justifiable. Might have been an easy way to get rid of an unruly (watered down descriptor) customer.
 
I mostly view price gouging as taking advantage of folks who are in distress/misery (i.e., the poor folks in CA whose homes are destroyed by the fire).

If a hotel increases rates in order to take advantage of an "increase in business" like poor people displaced by the CA fires, the management and owners of such hotels belong to the "pond scum, maggots" category indicated at the beginning of this thread.

And, it's a shame that government has to step in to stop such practices, but sometimes, it's necessary.

I say off with their 'eds! /bcforum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/hammer.gif

Pond scum, no doubt about it. /bcforum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/devilgrin.gif
 
Pond scum?...these are bottom-dwelling scum-suckers if you ask me!!
 
Just wondered, did anyone actually find something that documented the price gouging out in California? I've always strongly resisted using CNN (and others) as a reliable source.

All I can find online are references to California's current anti-price gouging law, which was in effect as of October 21 (when the emergency was declared):

California Penal Code Section 396 prohibits charging a price that exceeds, by more than 10%, the price of an item before the declaration of emergency. This law applies to those who sell food, emergency supplies, medical supplies, building materials, and gasoline. The law also applies to repair or reconstruction services, emergency cleanup services, transportation, freight and storage services, and housing and hotel accommodations.

Tom
 
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