The Holiday Inn is a world-renowned family hotel chain that prides its self on hospitable service. This hotel chain has been the traveler’s delight for years; an inexpensive place to stay on almost every major highway exit in the United States. Not so on Sunday the 15th of June. That evening two young women traveling from North Carolina to Colorado decided to pull off the highway get a room for the night. A relaxing dinner and a full night sleep were in order before continuing their westward trek. The evening’s stop on the road was St. Charles, Missouri. At the Urging of their families the hotel that they specifically sought out was a Holiday Inn. The parents of these two young women asked them to stay at a Holiday Inn because of its reputation for safety and good service as well as personal experience with the hotel chain.Sara and Melinda are recent alumni of a prestigious Presbyterian private school located in the Northeastern Mountains of Georgia. Both girls were honors students and Sara herself was President of her student class all four years of her high school career. These girls acquired many achievements in Academics, Sports, and Arts with dedication, hard work, and a very developed sense of responsibility that I have seen first hand; Sara is my younger sister. These two young ladies stood in front of a Holiday Inn desk clerk in shock and awe as he told them that a room would not be made available to them for the simple fact that they are not over the age of 21, they’re only 18. This clerk even refused to talk to two frantic parents, the mothers of the girls, that were willing to use whatever means necessary to secure their daughters a safe place to stay. The Holiday Inn Corporation has stated that such policies are left to the individual franchise owner. In many ways I see the need for such policies; a local kid decides to throw a party, then room gets wrecked, it’s happened many times. I was under the impression that hotel chains carried insurance to cover such a liability. In this case you have two beautiful young women that are obliviously traveling. The car is so packed they can hardly see out the back window and has a NC license plate. Presenting North Carolina identification, being refused the safety and peace of mind that a room at one of the nations largest hotel chains could provide. The upside to this story is that an unnamed clerk at another unnamed hotel chain had the presence of mind to bend the rules and allow two young travelers a safe haven for the night. To that person I would like to say a heartfelt thank you for taking care of my little sister and her friend. Still there are the questions lingering in the back of my mind. Why would they turn away two young women that have traveled across the country? How many hotels have this type of policy? Why wouldn’t they allow the clerks to use their own judgment? What could have possibly happened if they hadn’t found someone willing to bend the rules? What if they’d slept at a rest stop? Kidnapping? Rape? Murder? What if they could only continue on their way and one of them fell asleep at the wheel? It pains me to even think of such scenarios, I watched these two young women grow up, however these are valid concerns. In this day and age the United States has struggled to be safety conscious and protect our children and society. In places we have gone so far a to ban Dodge Ball from schools, suspend young girls for having over the counter medication to ease menstrual cramps, suspend children for drawing pictures of guns and even threaten to expel a young grade school boy for kissing a girl on the cheek, calling it sexual harassment. Many of my friends and I laughed these occurrences off and just like many Americans, we were thinking, ?what’ll they come up with next??nbsp; I personally think that these situations are ludicrous. I’ve never spoken out against these situations because of the “what can one person do?mentality, in hindsight I should have spoken my opinion. What good would it have done, maybe none, but it wouldn’t have hurt to throw in my two cents. I couldn’t in good conscience let this issue go. Parents should be alert to the fact that if their child is under 21, he/she might not be able to get a hotel room. Shouldn’t we take our attention away from child hood games and over the counter medications and focus it on a greater issue? Now my question is: Is it wise to let young adults, ages 18 to 20, travel around the country seeing as they may not be able to secure safe room and board? This is something the parent of a student starting college should think about. How far away is that college? Will he/she have to spend the night somewhere? Will he/she be able to get a room for the night? I love to travel, I always have: that’s the reason I’ve been to almost every state in the U.S. as well as Canada, Mexico, Australia and New Zealand. I think traveling gave me some of the greatest insights into this world and how it works, not to mention that I had a lot of fun. Before this incident I would recommend travel to anyone, regardless of age; now, I don’t know. I personally think that this is something the American public, and those from other counties traveling in the U.S. should take a good long look at: it could turn out to be a national safety issue for our traveling youth.
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