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Posts Tagged ‘Spa Closing’

Doylestown PA Day Spa and Childrens Spa Closes

April 2nd, 2009

annodam-closingMembers of a Kintnersville Brownie Girl Scout troop raised $652 for a spa day to count toward their Healthy Habits badges.

Instead, the girls may learn a different lesson: always get it in writing.

Troop leader Rosemary Korchek, who had already paid for the April excursion over the phone with her credit card, arrived at the Seedlings Salon in Doylestown this week to find it locked and empty. The Web site for the children’s salon and its grown-up counterpart, Annodam, said the businesses shut down “due to current economic conditions.” An outgoing voice mail message said a new salon and spa will open in the near future but didn’t offer specifics.

The business closed March 7 after owners learned a day earlier it had to file for bankruptcy, co-owner Karen Lafferty said. Employees have been scrambling ever since to connect clients with other salons and hadn’t gotten to the Brownies’ mid-April appointment yet. She said the salon will refund the troop’s money.

This is a low point, Lafferty said, and the salon has 19,000 clients who’d have positive things to say about their experience with her business.

“We’re trying our best, dealing with everything we have to deal with,” Lafferty said.

The 19 Brownies raised the $652 by selling magazines, nuts and sweets, said Korchek. The troop paid up front in early February to lock in an April 10 appointment for manicures, pedicures, a lotion-mixing session and aromatherapy at Seedlings, Korchek said.

After hearing from Korchek, Serenity Day Spa and Wellness Center on Swamp Road stepped up Wednesday afternoon and offered the girls a Saturday afternoon session free of charge, so long as they leave a tip. The girls will learn about facial and nail care from two manicurists and four estheticians, then head home with some goodie bags, said Serenity co-owner Jennifer Wiegand.

Earlier on Wednesday, Korchek, whose own 6-year-old daughter was among the Brownies looking forward to the Seedlings trip, said she hadn’t told the girls their spa chances looked bleak.
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“They’ve really looked forward to this. They’ve really worked hard,” Korchek said of the Brownies, who range from 6 to 8 years old. “I’ve got to explain to them, sorry, we can’t go.”

Seedlings opened in the summer of 2004 as a place for kids to get away from the stresses of everyday life. The rainforest-themed business offered yoga classes, parties and a full range of salon services. This week, a peek inside the South Main Street spa’s windows shows an all-but-gutted Annodam and a darkened, empty Seedlings, a phone message pad and scattered business cards lying on an entryway bench.

Korchek said she’d spent half an hour conference calling with Seedlings management to organize the trip and was asked for full payment over the phone; she was told no-shows would be credited back to her card, and any moms who came along would be given $25 coupons for the adult salon next door.

The Bucks County Office of Consumer Protection is aware of the spa’s closure but hasn’t heard any formal complaints, said department director Michael Bannon.

When a business shuts down unexpectedly, consumers would be surprised how often sending a certified letter results in a refund, he said. Mail is generally forwarded to a new address, and letters copied to the consumer protection office will be filed away for future reference.

But buyers have to protect themselves in this economic climate, he said — first and foremost by documenting any exchange of money. Consumers should always get contracts, receipts or other paperwork to verify their transactions.

When there’s only a verbal agreement, the business may have a moral obligation to follow through but pinning down its legal obligations is trickier, Bannon said. Consumers need to do their homework, which includes asking businesses up front about financial stability and the possibility of closure.

“We have to ask those questions these days,” Bannon said.

 

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South Carolina Spa Resort Closes – Daufuskie Island Resort & Breathe Spa

March 23rd, 2009

Daufuskie resort lays off remaining staff, closes doors

The Daufuskie Island Resort & Breathe Spa closed its doors this week, laying off what was left of its skeleton staff.

A bankruptcy judge ruled Tuesday that a trustee will be appointed to manage the resort, which could lead to a reopening. A trustee has not yet been named.

“It could be two days or two weeks until a trustee is picked and the resort’s back in business,” said Russ Brown, chairman and CEO of RBC Enterprises, which develops and sells real estate at the resort.

Brown said owners Bill and Gayle Dixon of San Francisco shut down operations and relinquished control of the club, the latest twist in a complicated bankruptcy case that started in January.

As a result, the Melrose Inn, the Melrose golf course/club house, and ferry operations from Salty Fare on Squire Pope Road on Hilton Head Island have been closed.

In another development, the bankruptcy judge ruled last week that the Dixons could not sell or lease portions of the resort without the consent of a select group of resort members.

Rich Silver, a member involved in a lawsuit against the resort, and Brown both said a lender was willing to loan the Dixons money but only if the bankruptcy judge allowed them to sell or lease its assets freely. The judge would not allow that.

“As a result of this ruling, the one lender that was willing to lend (the Dixons) monies to keep operatingis no longer willing to make that loan,” wrote Silver.

Brown said that after the lender pulled out, the Dixons agreed to let the court appoint a trustee.

Brown said having a trustee manage the resort is good news for everyone involved, including the Dixons’ creditors.

“It means an independent party, not tied up emotionally, is selected to move forward the resort, which allows the best possible chances for the creditors … to be paid back,” he said.

Brown and Silver said they hope to see the resort, and in particular the popular Melrose golf course, open once a trustee is selected.

“Hopefully, a trustee will be appointed immediately and that trustee can take over very quickly and ensure that at least minimal operations are resumed,” Silver wrote.

Brown said the sooner the trustee is named, the better.

Neither the resort members’ attorney, Alexander Beard, nor the Dixons’ bankruptcy attorney, Ivan Nossokoff, returned phone calls seeking comment.

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Plains PA Spa Closed – Gift Certificate Holders Mad

February 19th, 2009

I-Team: Spa Certificates Stressing Customers

Now to our I-Team report. A business that specialized in relaxation is causing nothing but stress. It’s a story that could be repeated over and over again as retailers struggle to survive. Consumer and I-Team reporter Jeff Chirico is live in the control center with the story.

The I-team was contacted by several women who hold in total over 800 dollars in gift certificates for a salon that abruptly shut down last year. One woman asked for a refund but was told no way. He told me he did not owe me a dime. But Jennifer Altemos is demanding her money back for a gift certificate to Atmosphere Salon and Day Spa in Plains Township. The business closed suddenly last year.

It’s $55 down the drain. Ann Marie Hufford also wants a refund. These are just two of 7 women the I-Team knows of who hold more than 800 dollars in gift certificates. A plea from Jennifer was ignored. “He said he didn’t care, don’t threaten him, he was not paying.

“Atmosphere is a full service salon and day spa” This is video of company president Helen Kimble when she appeared on WBRE in unrelated stories last spring. Attorney Dan Munley says companies are responsible to pay, but filing a lawsuit may not be worth it. If you have a fifty dollar gift certificate and you pay 100 dollars for the suit, that would be the question to me.”

We called Kimble who says she’s working with her attorney to resolve all legal issues.

After hearing about the angry customers, the first owner of atmosphere, Erica Michaliga, who sold it to Kimble in 2007 has agreed to honor the certificates for the next 60 days in her new Zen Day Spa. “I appreciate your help and tell Jeff that we appreciate it” We’re told the corporation that operated Atmosphere under Kimble is filing bankruptcy but as of this Wednesday afternoon it hadn’t.

The state Attorney General is also working on this case. You can file a complaint at www.attorneygeneral.gov .

And here’s a tip –if you have a gift certificate use it soon. In this economy, you don’t know when a company may lock it’s doors.

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Spavelous Alerted Spa Goers and Gift certifcate buyers last year that they should not purchase gift certificates or gift cards from single spa or small spa chains.  Spa treatments make a wonderful gift, but you should always give a spa gift card that is backed by VISA like the Spavelous spa gift card.  It can be used at any spa or salon that accepts VISA.

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