Rented @thriftycars car in Ireland via @Expedia . Had to delay trip by 1 day. Expedia indicated they couldn't change it, call Thrifty + ask them to hold. Called Thrifty + they said they "couldn't" hold the car. Had to cancel + rebook w/another company for more than 2X the cost.
I'm getting utterly screwed over by @PlymouthRock. I had a bundled auto/homeowners policy. Because we had a number of (small) auto claims clustered together, they opted to drop us. Okay, fair enough. Sucks, but I get it. (Part 1)
@PlymouthRock Part 13 - I found a Sanborn map dated 1917 that shows there is no house on my lot. The Sanborn map from 1910, of course, shows the same thing, along with the fact that my side street didn't even exist yet. @PlymouthRock says it doesn't matter.
@PlymouthRock Part 12 - They couldn't tell me why, but speculated it was the supposed year the house was built combined with a lapsed policy that made me uncoverable without working directly with a local agent.
@ATTHelp Thank you for the response. I had a positive interaction with your social media customer service representative. Still things to be resolved, but a big step in the right direction. If it all gets resolved, I'll make sure to post something positive on my wall.
@ATT enticed me to switch over. Signed up using my phone. Used same phone to troubleshoot issues with the new phones. Then mailed it in, having been promised a monthly credit. They claim the phone wouldn't turn on and are refusing the credit or to return the phone to me. Hmm.
Switched to @ATT partly because I could get money back on my phone. Spent many hours taking on the same phone iron8ng out the details before making it in. Now they claim the phone won't turn on and refuse to return the phone so I can examine it. How is that legal?