โAug-03-2019 05:12 AM
โAug-18-2019 07:27 PM
โAug-18-2019 07:06 PM
pnichols wrote:
Off topic, but ... I see absolutely no use for debit cards ... except maybe for maintaining convenience if one's credit is so bad that they can't qualify for a credit card.
If you don't like having high interest credit "on the books for very long" ... then just pay off your credit card('s) balance(s) every month. Even if you're a pay-it-off-every-month kind of person, a credit card's high limit at the very least can function as an instance source of funds to use for unforseen financial emergencies, like:
1. Emergency repairs on one's stick house.
2. Emergency repairs of one's RV when on a trip.
3. Emergency medi-vac transportation and/or medical treatment a long way from home until you can work it out sometime later with your insurance company to pay for it.
i.e. Our motorhome's transmission once blew as were going to meet traveling friends to begin a major RV trip together. We needed a remanufactured transmission installed ASAP at a cost of over $5500 dollars. No way do we keep that much cash around or that much in our checking account. They had the transmission ordered and installed the next day ... so I just pulled out the credit card to no-hassle cover it, and off we went on the trip with our friends.
Those same traveling friends as above also had to replace their RV's transmission while they were with us on a trip a long way from home. They merely pulled out their credit card to cover it and we both continued our our trip in the two RVs.
IMHO even at their high interest rates - large balances on credit cards due to the servicing of emergencies accrue so little interest until a quick payoff later - that it makes it well worth it to have access to a credit card to use in otherwise stressful financial situations.
FWIW, we even use a credit card heavily each month for regular living expenses so as to build up hundreds of dollars in cash rewards of 5% on gas, 3% on groceries, and 1% on all other purchases.
โAug-18-2019 02:42 PM
โAug-18-2019 01:00 PM
schlep1967 wrote:
These ridiculous policies are put in place as scare tactics to keep people from destroying the campgrounds property. It makes people think the campground can arbitrarily charge their card if they tear something up. Think about it for just a minute. If I see a charge on my card for anything other than the price I agreed to pay for the site, I'm calling my card company and telling them I did not authorize that charge. And they will reverse it.
So basically all the policy does is penalize a family that does not have a credit card.
โAug-18-2019 10:52 AM
โAug-05-2019 07:16 AM
โAug-05-2019 07:08 AM
โAug-05-2019 04:47 AM
article wrote:
CBC agreed not to use Kristi's last name, as she says her family has received threats since the incident. There's also been an online backlash against the business.
โAug-04-2019 06:50 AM
fj12ryder wrote:
Egads!! It wasn't the debit card or credit card!! Read and understand:
"But things went awry when she tried to pay for the booking with her ex-husband's credit card. A staff person informed her that the card had to be in the name of the person who made the booking."
MSN.com wrote:
She called the campground ahead of time to book a site and learned that her Visa debit card would not be accepted, but that she could pay on location with a credit card when she got there.
โAug-03-2019 07:47 PM
SARGUY wrote:Egads!! It wasn't the debit card or credit card!! Read and understand:
I think the campground owner did her best to resolve the problem after she became aware of it. It is sad to see a little girl be disappointed, but the lady who made the original reservation should have ensured that her lack of a credit card would not be a problem. I have experienced many situations when renting a car or booking a hotel room required a credit card, debit cards for some reason were not acceptable.
โAug-03-2019 07:44 PM
โAug-03-2019 06:37 AM
โAug-03-2019 06:28 AM
wa8yxm wrote:
Or she could have purchased a VISA Debit card (pre paid) in her name.
โAug-03-2019 06:17 AM