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| re: question | |
| Posted by: Michael_Portantiere 05:19 pm EDT 04/20/20 | |
| In reply to: re: question - MockingbirdGirl 02:31 pm EDT 04/20/20 | |
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| "Clearly, their plea for patience in the face of a rather unprecedented situation is falling on deaf ears." Yes, clearly, in this case. Ticket sellers have to refund what amounts to huge sums of money to thousands and thousands of people, and I would think they literally can't do it all at once, both in terms of cash flow and the sheer logistics involved. |
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| Cash flow shouldn’t be the issue | |
| Posted by: dramedy 07:24 pm EDT 04/20/20 | |
| In reply to: re: question - Michael_Portantiere 05:19 pm EDT 04/20/20 | |
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| I believe future ticket sales are held in an escrow account for the refund for cancelled events. I have no idea what has to occur manually for refunds to happen. I do wonder who is paying that 3% fee charged by credit cards when they reverse the charges. Is it the producer or the ticket agency. I’m assuming the producer. |
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| re: question | |
| Last Edit: MockingbirdGirl 05:51 pm EDT 04/20/20 | |
| Posted by: MockingbirdGirl 05:49 pm EDT 04/20/20 | |
| In reply to: re: question - Michael_Portantiere 05:19 pm EDT 04/20/20 | |
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| Ticket sellers have to refund what amounts to huge sums of money to thousands and thousands of people, and I would think they literally can't do it all at once, both in terms of cash flow and the sheer logistics involved. And many (all?) of the refunds being processed by agents working from home while balancing their own child care and family issues. A bit of compassion for other people wouldn't come amiss. |
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