FlyingFiona
Active Member
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2020
- Posts
- 585
Putting this out to the brains' trust for some help.
A train tour my family took last year in Australia was not as advertised and I'm wondering the best avenue for escalation.
We were required to take two bus replacements for significant sections of the multi-day trip due to bridges being compromised. We are seeking compensation for one of these because it was not communicated to us in advance of the tour despite the company knowing about the issue both at the time of booking, and at the time that full payment was required (we booked with a deposit months in advance, and paid in full 45 days before the tour). We were not, therefore, given the opportunity to cancel our booking in light of the changes to the itinerary which is the basis of my complaint. We would likely have done this (and forgone the deposit) because the major section in question that we had to be transferred to a bus was the most significant section of the itinerary for us.
I have complained to the company who, after two emails, finally responded to say tough luck, you agreed to the terms of the booking which is that we can make whatever operational changes we like. I have pointed out that the ACCC is clear, "Businesses can’t take away a consumer's right to a refund or replacement for faulty products or services. It’s illegal for businesses to rely on store policies or terms and conditions which deny these rights."
I can make a complaint to the ACCC now, but that won't resolve the situation for us. (We are seeking a refund of 1/3-1/2 the booking fee as a concessionary point, but in light of their lax response time and nonchalant reply now feel that we ought to go for a full refund).
What other avenues do you suggest? The Ombudsman for the state they are in? Small claims tribunal? (Is that likely to be worth it?)
Thanks in advance for your thoughts.
A train tour my family took last year in Australia was not as advertised and I'm wondering the best avenue for escalation.
We were required to take two bus replacements for significant sections of the multi-day trip due to bridges being compromised. We are seeking compensation for one of these because it was not communicated to us in advance of the tour despite the company knowing about the issue both at the time of booking, and at the time that full payment was required (we booked with a deposit months in advance, and paid in full 45 days before the tour). We were not, therefore, given the opportunity to cancel our booking in light of the changes to the itinerary which is the basis of my complaint. We would likely have done this (and forgone the deposit) because the major section in question that we had to be transferred to a bus was the most significant section of the itinerary for us.
I have complained to the company who, after two emails, finally responded to say tough luck, you agreed to the terms of the booking which is that we can make whatever operational changes we like. I have pointed out that the ACCC is clear, "Businesses can’t take away a consumer's right to a refund or replacement for faulty products or services. It’s illegal for businesses to rely on store policies or terms and conditions which deny these rights."
I can make a complaint to the ACCC now, but that won't resolve the situation for us. (We are seeking a refund of 1/3-1/2 the booking fee as a concessionary point, but in light of their lax response time and nonchalant reply now feel that we ought to go for a full refund).
What other avenues do you suggest? The Ombudsman for the state they are in? Small claims tribunal? (Is that likely to be worth it?)
Thanks in advance for your thoughts.