bluesneakers
not today satan
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2014
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Anonymous call
At the very least not put yourself in the line of fire.
Anonymous call
I don't think you are following what I am saying.
I call BS on Steve Wynn. I go to Vegas or anywhere, I keep my do not disturb sign ON my hotel door anytime I'm not there if I do not want my room done. And I don't have it done every day. I don't like people in my room either, when I'm not there. ESPECIALLY in Vegas and I have money around. I also leave the TV on.I've never been questioned, and I was just there a few months ago, 5 days, never had maid service, just exchanged towels when I wanted or saw them in the hall.
Not to be overly grim, but I imagine there wouldn't be much to study after he killed himself. The trauma would probably be massive.
[emoji202]MOO
I do the same thing every time I stay in a hotel. I enjoy my privacy. Most hotels I've stayed in recent years actually promote an "energy and earth-conscious" type of policy that encourages customers to let hotel staff know that you don't want/need towels and linens changed out or the room cleaned/made every day. The "do not disturb" sign goes up on my door and doesn't come down till I check out. I just let them know if I need something. It's kinda awesome.
ETA: Just after I posted this I realized Vegas might be a little different than most places. Three or five or more days without room/cleaning service might very well be a red flag. Suicides, illegal activity, parties, too many people staying in a room, etc. Hm.
I call BS on Steve Wynn. I go to Vegas or anywhere, I keep my do not disturb sign ON my hotel door anytime I'm not there if I do not want my room done. And I don't have it done every day. I don't like people in my room either, when I'm not there. ESPECIALLY in Vegas and I have money around. I also leave the TV on.I've never been questioned, and I was just there a few months ago, 5 days, never had maid service, just exchanged towels when I wanted or saw them in the hall.
We are also one that leave our do not disturb sign up for our entire stay. I never gave it a second thought, but I am not surprised to read that for security purposes staff is trained to be alert to this and report. I don't think we would ever know we were being checked on. Investigating can be as simple as checking to see the last time the room was opened by guest. If it hadn't been accessed in the time frame further behind the scenes checks would be done without our knowledge.
That could happen in any hotel. I would think Vegas would be the opposite, because what goes in Vegas, stays in Vegas. So if somebody doesn't want their room clean for several days, I fail to see why it would raise a red flag. I presume it goes there day in and day out.
I do the same thing every time I stay in a hotel. I enjoy my privacy. Most hotels I've stayed in recent years actually promote an "energy and earth-conscious" type of policy that encourages customers to let hotel staff know that you don't want/need towels and linens changed out or the room cleaned/made every day. The "do not disturb" sign goes up on my door and doesn't come down till I check out. I just let them know if I need something. It's kinda awesome.
ETA: Just after I posted this I realized Vegas might be a little different than most places. Three or five or more days without room/cleaning service might very well be a red flag. Suicides, illegal activity, parties, too many people staying in a room, etc. Hm.
I'm not disagreeing with you. I don't want anyone else in my hotel room unless I invite them. But I also can see how it would raise a flag. ... Now that I'm thinking about it, hotel staff does "check in" with me when I decline maid and other services. Haven't really though about why until now. The front desk will check and see how I'm doing and if I need/want anything, especially as I come and go from the hotel. Went to Colorado earlier this year; I was kinda shocked and amazed that the front desk peeps greeted me by name when I saw them. It was a nice, newer hotel, so maybe the staff was just mega "on." I really enjoyed my stay there.
[emoji202]MOO
I agree there is no way IMO checking out a do not disturb sign would of prevented this from happening. I am just not surprised to find out that they can be an alert to staff.In suspects case, if they checked, they would have found nothing unusual since he was apparently a frequent guest. Also sounds like he wasn't staying inside the room all the time, he was coming and going.
I think they still come snd straighten up though.
I agree there is no way IMO checking out a do not disturb sign would of prevented this from happening. I am just not surprised to find out that they can be an alert to staff.
That could happen in any hotel. I would think Vegas would be the opposite, because what goes in Vegas, stays in Vegas. So if somebody doesn't want their room clean for several days, I fail to see why it would raise a red flag. I presume it goes there day in and day out.
I think they still come snd straighten up though.
They sure didn't when I was in Colorado this time, and they haven't at other places I've stayed in recent years. I asked for maid service one day during my stay in Colorado. They didn't touch anything the rest of the time I was there. If I had trash or dirty towels or anything like that, I bagged it and placed it outside my door when I heard them coming down the hall each morning. They would pick it up and leave me replacements. They were great.
[emoji202]MOO
They are not going to come in if you have a "do not disturb" sign on the door. That's what these signs are for.