All that seems left of the cautionary business tale that was Merle Gregg's litany of gym business scams, frauds, swindles, cheats, and all manner of other business nonsense that were Epicenter Fitness, then Seattle Executive Fitness, and then Go Total Body Fitness, is the epitaph that Merle Gregg continued the gym industry's long history or poorly operated businesses that nearly always turns to deceptive business practices and frauds.
When Merle Gregg took over All-Star fitness in 2011, he acquired a large and useful physical fitness facility. Over the course of just a few years, he and his cohorts incrementally, nearly systematically, ran it into the ground, and destroyed it. Along the way hired henchmen like the obnoxious bullying Todd Dail, who seemed to relish in knowingly conspiring in the operation of a shady business.
During one period there was at least half a dozen gyms competing with each other in downtown Seattle. Today, all that is left of large scale gyms in downtown Seattle in the national chain 24 Hour Fitness, which existed long before the other gyms arrived and are now little more than bad memories.
Since the demise of the Merle's fitness business mess, Merle Gregg seems to have nearly erase every trace of his existence form the internet, save a couple of LinkedIn profiles that reference his ownership of his failed businesses, neither one mentioning the alternate business names used in the other profile.
Showing posts with label Merle Gregg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Merle Gregg. Show all posts
November 8, 2017
June 9, 2014
Seattle Executive Fitness - 700 5th Avenue - Location Closing!
The latest sign that Merle Gregg's Seattle Executive Fitness seems close to bankruptcy has arrived. That sign is that Merle Gregg is closing the 700 5th Avenue 14th Floor Seattle Executive Fitness gym location. A few weeks before the 5th Avenue Seattle Executive Fitness location closed entirely, the staff there closed the swimming pool. In the process of closing the swimming pool, they told members all sorts of lies and made all manner of excuses about why they were closing it, which led people to complain about the problem on yelp.com. The fact is that many Seattle Executive Fitness members only visited the 5th Avenue location to use the pool. The rest of that Seattle Executive Fitness gym location was too small and overcrowded anyway.
In the meantime, members have been quitting the horrible Seattle Executive Fitness in droves. It is just bizarre that the gym's absurd owner Merle Gregg has managed to take two once very serviceable fitness clubs and completely run them into the ground. When Merle Gregg bought out the gyms from All-Star Fitness in the summer of 2011, they are quite nice places to work out. Then, step by step, Merle Gregg and the people who work for him, did everything imaginable to incrementally ruin the places.
Meanwhile, just trying to quit Seattle Executive Fitness is a project in itself. The management and staff don't even allow members to follow the procedures outlined in their own written contract. Instead they require members to send a written letter by mail to their billing company ABC Financial. The process seems like all part of their many self defeating ripoff schemes, designed to irritate members infinitely while they try in vain to suck every last buck they can out of the people they've suckered into joining their travesty of a gym.
Most of the people who used to workout at Seattle Executive Fitness have already moved on to other gyms in the area. It seems like every gym in Seattle has its problems and deficiencies, but Seattle Executive Fitness has managed to find ways to top the list of places to avoid at all costs. Since the buck stops at the top, every that has made Seattle Executive Fitness such a nightmare is all Merle Gregg's fault.
November 1, 2013
The Hours of Operation Have Been Cutback at Seattle Executive Fitness - The Death Spiral Continues
Unfortunately for members who work all day, the Seattle Executive Fitness gym on Olive Way in downtown Seattle has reduced its evening hours. The Olive Way gym now closes at 9:00 PM weeknights. Previously, the gym was open until 11:00 PM, a minimum reasonable hour for a gym that portends to cater to "executives", many of whom work late into the evening and would like to get in a workout on the way home from the office. For the moment, the other location, the tiny gym in the Municipal Tower on Fifth Avenue remains open until 10:00 PM weeknights.
With each passing week there are increasing indications that Seattle Executive Fitness is thrashing about in the throws of what seems like an inevitable death spiral. The signs of doom are everywhere at Seattle Executive Fitness: from the reduced size of the Olive Way gym, loss of the separate Olive Way street level entrance, desperate attempts to diversify into the "Spa" business, defections by trainers and group class instructors, removal of equipment, removal of the Women's Only workout room, the lack of maintenance, and now the reduction in hours of operation.
There are numerous competing gyms with longer hours than Seattle Executive Fitness, including 24 hour Fitness (which obviously is open 24/7), which has a large location just a few blocks east of the Olive Way Seattle Executive Fitness location. Much of what is happening at Seattle Executive Fitness seems like an extreme failure to listen to or to pay attention to customers and customer service. The people who manage Seattle Executive Fitness have failed to understand, internalize, and implement, even the most basic tenants of the Business 101 fundamentals. Anyone who's taken even just a few college business administration courses knows how nearly every such scenario ends.
With each passing week there are increasing indications that Seattle Executive Fitness is thrashing about in the throws of what seems like an inevitable death spiral. The signs of doom are everywhere at Seattle Executive Fitness: from the reduced size of the Olive Way gym, loss of the separate Olive Way street level entrance, desperate attempts to diversify into the "Spa" business, defections by trainers and group class instructors, removal of equipment, removal of the Women's Only workout room, the lack of maintenance, and now the reduction in hours of operation.
There are numerous competing gyms with longer hours than Seattle Executive Fitness, including 24 hour Fitness (which obviously is open 24/7), which has a large location just a few blocks east of the Olive Way Seattle Executive Fitness location. Much of what is happening at Seattle Executive Fitness seems like an extreme failure to listen to or to pay attention to customers and customer service. The people who manage Seattle Executive Fitness have failed to understand, internalize, and implement, even the most basic tenants of the Business 101 fundamentals. Anyone who's taken even just a few college business administration courses knows how nearly every such scenario ends.
If only there were indications that Seattle Executive Fitness management might step back from the edge of the cliff where it currently stands, but there don't seem to be any at all. If the history of Merle Gregg's previous gym business ventures is any predictor of the end result for Seattle Executive Fitness, his business track record indicates that he will won't listen to anyone, not even the paying customers he is driving away, until its too late, and the gym's doors are closed forever, not just at 9:00 PM weeknights.
Labels:
509 Olive Way,
511 Olive Way,
9:00 PM,
death spiral,
gym,
hours,
Merle Gregg,
Seattle Executive Fitness
October 22, 2013
Seattle Executive Fitness Posts Signs About Reductions in Service that contains LIES, LIES, LIES, AND MORE AND MORE LIES!
The management at Seattle Executive Fitness is just telling, lies, lies, lies, and more and more lies. Recently, signs have been posted around the 509 Olive Way location of Seattle Executive Fitness that attempt in vain to explain away the fact that a huge portion of the gym's floor space is now gone. No reasonable person could possibly be gullible enough to believe the sort of nonsense that these signs attempt to peddle at the gym's members. It is obvious to every intelligent Seattle Executive Fitness member that the gym's shocking size reduction is the product of financial desperation, to reduce the overhead expense of floor space rental. Here's one of the so called FAQ signs posted around the gym:
Click for a larger version with readable text. |
#1 The previous free weight area at the northwest corner of the gym's third floor was not only bigger than the new one, it just had better ambiance. The people using it on a regular basis enjoyed it. The "new" free weight area has cannibalized the previous Cybex treadmill room. The entire gym downsizing process is the opposite of what thousands of gym member customers have been trying to tell the gym's management for years, but the gym management has never listened.
#2 This is probably the most egregious of the gym management's lies. Basically, this idiotic gym is all but abandoning strength training equipment. People join gyms because gyms have thousands and thousands and dollars worth of training equipment that only a billionaire with room for a home gym could afford as an individual. Seattle Executive Fitness management has left only a half dozen, token, pieces of Cybex VR3 strength training machines on the third floor, but not enough for anyone to use for a reasonable strength machine oriented workout of any kind. Removal of the strength straining equipment, more than any other ridiculous change at the gym, spells total doom for Seattle Executive Fitness.
#3 What the dedicated personal trainer area is really about, is trying to focus members of paying for expensive private sessions with their staff, because they don't have enough members paying monthly dues to in pay their rent and employee wages.
#4 The floor space reduction not only axed the popular kickboxing studio, that gear is supposedly going to be cluttering up the aerobics studios, getting in the way of people trying to do something different. Obviously, there are going to be same number of group classes competing for the space in the reduced number of group studios.
#5 They are apparently going to remodel the group class studios, creating a smaller spin class room. The members whose primary reason for a gym membership is spin classes are very unhappy about this.
#6 THE WOMEN'S GYM IS GOING BYE-BYE!!! A huge segment of this gym's membership population is women who use the women's only gym almost exclusively. Most importantly the LifeFitness strength training machines in the Women's gym has a lighter set of weight plates in each machine that the machines on the third floor don't/didn't. Didn't is the opertive word, since most of the strength training machines are now gone from the third floor too!
After years of alienating their gym members one at a time, the people who run Seattle Executive Fitness have finally found a way to alienate everybody else who has remained a member in the naive hope that company management might some day see the light. The light that members are seeing these days is the exit sign, signalling to them that its time to just cancel their memberships, quit, and find another gym, one that at least has gym equipment.
Labels:
509 Olive Way,
Cybex,
fitness,
gym,
LifeFitness,
Merle Gregg,
Olive Way,
Seattle Executive Fitness,
SEF,
strength training
October 8, 2013
AllStar Fitness, Before Its Destruction Under Ownership by Merle Gregg as Seattle "Executive" Fitness
The photos below show what some of AllStar Fitness looked like three years ago, before Merle Gregg took over, turned it into Seattle "Executive" Fitness, and has step by step destroyed just about everything it once was.
The first three year old photo below provides a view from the cardio fitness section all the way to the west end of the building, which was where the free weights room was until recently. At the far end, the gym used to extend around the corner to the left where there was a kickboxing studio at the southwest corner of the third floor.
Back then, there were three sets of equipment in the circuit training area between the cardio section and the free weights section. One set of strength training equipment was a grouping of Cybex VR3 (second tier of the Cybex line but very functional) circuit training machines. There was also various LifeFitness Signature Series strength training machines intermingled with them. Some of the LifeFitness machines were the newer Signature Series models, but some were also functional, but nearly twenty year old, machines. Both the older and newer LifeFitness strength machines remained until a most of the circuit training area midway down the hall in this photo, was walled off, no longer a part of the gym. In the photo below, at left center, a group of ancient Nautilus brand circuit training was still present before Merle Gregg took over. The old Nautilus brand equipment was removed in the summer of 2011 at the very beginning of the ownership change.
Back then, there were three sets of equipment in the circuit training area between the cardio section and the free weights section. One set of strength training equipment was a grouping of Cybex VR3 (second tier of the Cybex line but very functional) circuit training machines. There was also various LifeFitness Signature Series strength training machines intermingled with them. Some of the LifeFitness machines were the newer Signature Series models, but some were also functional, but nearly twenty year old, machines. Both the older and newer LifeFitness strength machines remained until a most of the circuit training area midway down the hall in this photo, was walled off, no longer a part of the gym. In the photo below, at left center, a group of ancient Nautilus brand circuit training was still present before Merle Gregg took over. The old Nautilus brand equipment was removed in the summer of 2011 at the very beginning of the ownership change.
This second photograph shows the once well organized treadmill room at AllStar Fitness, before Merle Gregg got control of it.
When the gym at 509 Olive Way was owned by AllStar Fitness, the portion of the gym that connected the Cybex treadmill room with the main cardio fitness area was occupied by a well organized, large selection of Precor treadmills and Precor elliptical training machines. In this midst of the ownership dispute between Merle Gregg and Sam Adams in late summer 2011, a significant portion of this equipment suddenly disappeared, and it never returned, and was never replaced by any new equipment either. Today what is left of the cardio equipment on the third floor of the gym at 509 Olive Way, are models of old cardio training machines that aren't even manufactured anymore. They appear to range in age from six to as much as ten years old, with many of them in constant need of repair because of their age.
Three years ago, the main cardio fitness area at what used to be AllStar Fitness was well organized, spacious, and adequate room between each piece of equipment, and accessible even for many disabled people.
After over two years of decline, deterioration, and mismanagement, the inadequate space that is left at the gym now known as Seattle "Executive Fitness, is a completely disorganized mess. The name of the place should probably be - Seattle Skid Row Fitness.
Labels:
509 Olive Way,
after,
Allstar,
AllStar Fitness,
before,
decline,
gym,
Merle Gregg,
Seattle,
Seattle Executive Fitness
April 23, 2013
Seattle Executive Fitness Entrance Becomes a Weight Watchers
There are indicators everywhere that Seattle Executive Fitness owner Merle Gregg is in dire financial straits and is taking desperate measures to save money as he gradually destroys a workout facility that was once a pretty nice place. When Seattle Executive Fitness opened years ago as AllStar Fitness (now bankrupt), the gym had a street presence with a separate first floor entrance way and member lounge area. Over the course of the past six months or so, Seattle Executive Fitness owner Merle Gregg has allowed the landlord at 509 Olive Way to reclaim multiple portions of the gym's space for lease to other tenants. There doesn't seem to be any reasonable conclusion to reach other than financial desperation by Merle Gregg, trying to reduce his monthly rental expense obligation as his failing business hemorrhages cash each month. Ironically, the more he scrimps and neglects the core of his business, the workout facility and services, the less attractive his gym becomes to its current members and the prospective new members his business needs in order to stay afloat.
Many months ago, Merle Gregg reduced the size of the main third floor workout area. The space Merle Gregg gave back to the Olive Way landlord used to be half of the stretching and personal training area. That area has now been taken over by a florist shop that also used to have a street level presence on the first floor, but is now only accessible through the third floor atrium area that now seems to be a public part of the building. It is hard to imagine how that florist shop is going to survive without a street level retail presence.
Over the course of the past couple of years, dozens upon dozens of consumer reviews of Seattle Executive Fitness on yelp.com have given Merle Gregg suggestions on how to make his gyms the best they can be. Merle Gregg gives the appearance that he has simply ignored the suggestions provided him by the customers who generate the revenue his business needs to succeed. Instead of staying focused on building and maintaining a quality place to workout, Merle Gregg has either ignored customer suggestions, or done things that seem deliberately self destructive to his business. It is amazing how many members of his gyms over the years have said that if he just put effort into making his gym a good place to workout, with honest business practices, it would go from a place whose customers complain on yelp.com to a thriving fitness center that would be the prime choice of people who work and live in downtown Seattle.
511 Olive Way will soon be a Weight Watcher's franchise |
Labels:
511 Olive Way,
entrance,
fitness,
gym,
health club,
Merle Gregg,
Seattle,
Seattle Executive Fitness,
SEF,
Weight Watchers,
weightwatchers
April 11, 2013
Seattle Executive Fitness Has Just A Dozen Cardio Theater Television Channels, Worse Yet, Some Are Often Blocked
There is nothing "Executive" at all about the selection or quantity of television channels on the Cardio Theater system at Seattle Executive Fitness. To make matters worse, often when flipping through the ten or twelve basic cable channels the chintzy owner provides, the cable/satellite television provider, apparently Dish Network, has blocked a channel because the owner hasn't paid the bill for it. When Seattle Executive Fitness was All Star Fitness, and owned by Bob Padgett, not Merle Gregg, the gym's Cardio Theater system was connected to ComCast cable. Back in the Allstar Fitness days at the Olive Way gym, there were more channels, they had all the broadcast channels, plus a reasonable number of cable channels, and there weren't ever any of the sorts of blocked channel notices that all too often appear on the television screens at Seattle Executive Fitness like the one pictured below does. The less than "Executive" experience gets worse at Seattle Executive Fitness though; all too often the televisions on the cardio equipment just stop working altogther, as though the power isn't on within them or something, and they often stay that way for days or weeks, until dozens or hundreds of people have complained about them.
Labels:
cardio theater,
channel blocked,
chintzy,
Merle Gregg,
Seattle Executive Fitness,
unpaid bill
April 4, 2013
Seattle Executive Fitness, LLC - Legal Business Information
Any member or former member of Seattle Executive Fitness who decides they need to file a lawsuit against the company, whether in: small claims court, district court, or superior court; should be aware of the company's legal business information and status. The two Seattle Executive Fitness locations actually appear to be two separate legal business entities. The are Washington State limited liability companies, a type of business known as an LLC. The legal business information about Seattle Executive Fitness, and Merle Gregg's ownership of it, can be obtained from a combination of two state operated government web sites. The first web site to check is the Washington State Business Licensing Service Search Portal at the following web address:
Once a business is found using the link above, copy and save the details of the business's legal information, especially its state Universal Business Identifier (UBI) number(s). Then use the UBI numbers to search the Washington State Secretary of State Corporation and Limited Liability Company Search Portal at the following web address:
When filing a lawsuit against Seattle Executive Fitness it may be prudent to include both of the different business entities listed below as defendants to the lawsuit. Plaintiffs who contracted as members of Epicenter Fitness who are now members of Seattle Executive Fitness due to the legal processes of contract assignment and contract succession, may want to include SAMG Holding Company (doing business as Epicenter Fitness) as an additional defendant to their lawsuit. The State of Washington lists Merle Gregg as a business owner of all three of these companies. It may be legally necessary to send notices, such as small claims court process service, and even certified mail copies of the membership cancellation information to the Registered Agent addresses listed by the state of Washington for the businesses.
For anyone who has been a victim of fraud, theft (called "conversion" in a civil lawsuit), or other Unfair Business Practices committed by Seattle Executive Fitness, Epicenter Fitness, or any other gym, a lawsuit may ultimately be necessary to obtain an appropriate level of financial and legal remedy. Afterward it can be useful to submit copies of the results to both the Better Business Bureau and the Washington State Attorney General's office of Consumer Protection.
EF SEATTLE OLIVE WAY LLC
UBI Number 603143474
Category LLC
Active/Inactive Active
State of Incorporation WA
WA Filing Date 09/13/2011
Expiration Date 09/30/2013
Inactive Date
Duration Perpetual
Registered Agent Information
Agent Name NATIONAL REGISTERED AGENTS INC
Address 505 UNION AVE SE STE 120
City OLYMPIA
State WA
ZIP 98501
EF SEATTLE FIFTH AVENUE LLC
UBI Number 603143469
Category LLC
Active/Inactive Active
State of Incorporation WA
WA Filing Date 09/13/2011
Expiration Date 09/30/2013
Inactive Date
Duration Perpetual
Registered Agent Information
Agent Name NATIONAL REGISTERED AGENTS INC
Address 505 UNION AVE SE STE 120
City OLYMPIA
State WA
ZIP 98501
EF SEATTLE FIFTH AVENUE LLC - UBI: 603143469
EF SEATTLE OLIVE WAY LLC - UBI: 603143474
SAMG HOLDING COMPANY - legal owner of defunct Epicenter Fitness
March 24, 2013
AllStar Fitness - West Seattle - Bankrupt - Sold to Sam Adams
It's official, multiple news outlets are reporting that the last remaining Allstar Fitness location, in West Seattle, owned by Bob Padgett, is bankrupt. After a federal bankruptcy court hearing in late March 2013, the West Seattle AllStar Fitness location has been sold to a company called Oregon Athletic Clubs. The announcement was made officially in a notice posted at the door fo the West Seattle AllStar Fitness club on March 22, 2013. At least temporarily the facility was closed and no members were allowed access. The West Seattle facility will apparently be renamed West Seattle Athletic Club, under the Oregon Athletic Clubs ownership.
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Click to enlarge and read. |
It turns out that the owner of Oregon Athletic Clubs is none other than Sam Adams. If that name sounds familiar, its because Sam Adams is the same former Seahawk player who started Epicenter Fitness with Merle Gregg in Seattle sometime during 2004 or 2005. Early in its history, Epicenter Fitness grew into a multiple location company, and then shrank back into its single downtown Seattle location until Epicenter bought the two downtown Seattle AllStar Fitness locations from Bob Padgett and transformed them into Epicenter Fitness. Within a few months of that buyout some sort of disagreement occurred between Merle Gregg and Sam Adams that ended with Merle Gregg buying out Sam Adams. Merle Gregg then reincorporated the two downtown Seattle facilities into what is currently the two Seattle Executive Fitness in downtown Seattle.
Meanwhile, there are various news media reports about the details of what will happen at the location that will now become West Seattle Athletic Club. Apparently the new owners are going to honor long term prepaid memberships from the club's previous members. According to various news reports, the company has been under the control of a Chapter 10 bankruptcy trustee since August 2012. That is Chapter 10, not Chapter 11, bankruptcy. In a Chapter 10 bankruptcy, a trustee takes over control of the company and negotiates its final disposition with creditors. Apparently federal bankruptcy judge Karen Overstreet is also ordering further investigation of Bob Padgett by the U.S. Attorney's Office (the federal prosecutor), regarding Padgett's activities and handling of his business and its bankruptcy.
Although the bankruptcy sale was approved, numerous creditors made a variety of objections. The company that is apparently the owner of the Medical Dental building at 509 Olive Way, where one of the current Seattle Executive Fitness locations exists, filed one of the most adamant objections. Apparently, West Seattle Fitness, LLC, the real corporate owner of the West Seattle AllStar Fitness location, owes the Olive Way company $2.5 million dollars! The writers at westseattleblog.com have been following this story and publishing minute details about the proceedings on their blog (follow this link).
One can only hope that members of what will become West Seattle Athletic Club will have a reasonable experience under the new owners. It seems like there should be some doubt, since the new owner Sam Adams, is part of the same long history of dubious gym ownership in Washington State that is central to numerous related gym ownership changes and gym closures.
Labels:
All Star,
Allstar,
bankrupt,
Bob Padgett,
closure,
Merle Gregg,
Sam Adams,
West Seattle
March 22, 2013
The Seattle Executive Fitness Membership Cancellation Scam
Seattle Executive Fitness, and many other gym businesses, have become well known for their various fraudulent business practices. Dozens of members and former members of Seattle Executive Fitness have described their horrific experiences as victims of such practices using reviews on yelp.com. Instead of owning up to the fact that his corrupt business uses illegal, unfair business practices, Seattle Executive Fitness owner Merle Gregg uses his ability to respond to yelp.com reviews by denying the truth and basically calling such reviewers liars. Merle Gregg doesn't seem to ever apologize for the trouble his busieness creates, and instead uses yelp.com to whine at and berate his former customers. He doesn't appear to be self aware enough to realize that almost all of his posts on yelp.com just reaffirm his well deserved reputation as a retaliating bully. Merle Gregg doesn't seem to understand that for every customer he scams, that former customer will tell a dozen of their friends, who will tell a dozen of their friends, none of whom will ever be customers of his business.
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Click to Enlarge! |
For example, one highly credible former member named Amy described the process she went through trying to end her membership in a review she posted to yelp.com (see screenshot). In her description on yelp.com, she described a couple of the scam techniques that Seattle Executive Fitness staff members have been known to employ on unsuspecting gym members. In Amy's case, she tried to follow the membership cancellation procedure and instructions provided in the membership contract precisely, by going to the facility to cancel her membership in person. The absolutely ridiculous excuses she was given by the staff member at the counter was that they were all out of cancellation forms, and that they needed to print more of them. Then the Seattle Executive Fitness staff person apparently flat out lied to Amy and told her that she could cancel her membership via billing provider ABC Financial over the telephone. That statement was also clearly a lie, in part because it is not provided for in the membership contract. Obviously, this former gym member later discovered too late that nothing she had done had actually canceled her membership and that the scam companies Seattle Executive Fitness and billing provider ABC Financial continued to defraud her debit/credit account after her attempts to end her membership. The only way she could have protected herself was by following the steps outlined in the paragraphs below. The one truthful thing she was told via an electronic mail from SEF staff member Katherine Pfizenmaier, was that nothing Amy had done actually cancelled her membership. Of course Katherine Pfizenmaier also fraudulently claimed that the front desk had cancellation forms on hand. It seems like every current Seattle Executive Fitness member should ask for and obtain a membership cancellation form to keep on hand long before an occasion for membership cancellation arises. It should be interesting to find out what scams and excuses Seattle Executive Fitness staff has for current members who try to ask for a membership cancellation form just to take home for future use. Members should please to try it, and send a confidential electronic mail to this blog about the experience using the email address in the right column of this blog. Every member of every fitness club should be forewarned that these fraudulent tactics are epidemic throughout the entire health club industry. When cancelling a membership it is absolutely essential to get all the paperwork in writing. It is essential not to be hoodwinked by the various illegal tactics health club staff members will use to stall and avoid performing the membership cancellation process.
There are additional steps to take after getting all the membership cancellation paperwork in writing, and signed by gym staff. First, make multiple photocopies of the membership cancellation paperwork. Using U.S. Certified Mail with return receipt requested, send the gym a certified mail letter notifying the gym that you have followed their cancellation procedure, that you are ending your membership and that you have included a photocopy of the completed paperwork as an enclosure with the letter. Send a backup copy of the letter just described to the gym, using a little known device called a Postal Service Certificate of Mailing. A Postal Service Certificate of Mailing provides proof of sending a document, but not of its actual receipt. However, courts of law consider a Postal Service Certificate of Mailing complete proof of communication. This is useful in case the gym refuses acceptance of the certified mail letter as another scam way of thwarting efforts by the customer to comply with gym membership contract procedures, Send a similar letter via certified mail to your financial institution notifying the bank, credit union, or credit card provider, that you have canceled your membership, enclosing a photocopy of the cancellation paperwork, and telling the financial institution that you have revoked authorization for the gym and ABC Financial to take money from your account.
All this paperwork and backup is necessary to create a paper trail of evidence for use in small claims court to sue the gym if they continue to take money from you after you have canceled your membership. Remember that you cannot and should not rely on any verbal promises or assurances you receive from either Seattle Executive Fitness (any other gym) or ABC Financial. The paperwork is essential as evidence. Be sure to make and keep copies of your original gym membership contract and any advertising for special rates and deals to which you may have responded. Winning a lawsuit depends entirely on having evidence to support your claim. Unfortunately for Amy W. she is still discovering that certified mail may seem archaic in the internet age, but a certified mail letter is the only evidence that is likely to be persuasive in small claims court.
If after following all the steps above, you find that Seattle Executive Fitness, or any other gym, unlawfully takes money from your bank account after you have closed your membership, have your bank migrate your account business to a new account number. If your bank charges you fees for this fraud protection service, be sure to keep all the paperwork for the fees. If you take any time off work to deal with these problems, keep a detailed log of the time spent, because that time, and the bank fees, can be added to a claim for monetary damages in court for people in professions where billable hours have been lost dealing with such a problem. All the time you spend updating online accounts whose debit/credit information must be changed, the hours spent doing so may also be part of a damage claim in small claims court. Instructions for filing and litigating a small claims court lawsuit are available here.
Over the course of numerous years, Merle Gregg and Seattle Executive Fitness, and his F Better Business Bureau rated Epicenter Fitness before that, have developed a reputation for the billing and membership cancellation scams described here. However, Seattle Executive Fitness and Merle Gregg aren't the only fitness business that operates this way. The Puget Sound area has suffered through a long history of such unscrupulous businesses, dating back at least to the 1990s when gyms such as Hart's Athletic Club and another called LivingWell Lady were eventually sued by the State Attorney General because of their systematic frauds. The LivingWell Lady chain was even barred entirely from doing business in Washington State.
Labels:
Merle Gregg,
Seattle Executive Fitness,
yelp,
yelp.com
March 14, 2013
Seattle Executive Fitness Deterioration Continues
It seems like every aspect of Seattle Executive Fitness continues to deteriorate. Every aspect of the neglect gives the appearance that the gym's owner, Merle Gregg, may be in serious financial trouble, with his gyms on the very of bankruptcy and closure. The list of obvious problems, some that have existed for a long period of time, and others that are new, is long and disturbing. Here are some of the more recent events that should give existing members pause, and should deter any prospective member from joining this disreputable, fraud plagued, establishment. Here is a partial of list of some of the recently noticed problems:
- the Olive Way location no longer has a separate entrance.
- the Olive Way location has been made smaller.
- the Olive Way location no longer provides easy access to the climbing wall area.
- the Olive Way location walls now display numerous threatening and disrespectful signs
- the gyms are dirty and don't seem to ever get cleaned.
- the equipment sets at the gyms are incomplete, and poorly if ever maintained.
- in a desperate attempt to save money, the owner has threatened to stop providing towel service.
- the gym's numerous fraudulent billing practices continue, and continue to be reported.
- the gyms's advertised prepaid plan offers are not honored.
Labels:
511 Olive Way,
fitness,
gym,
Merle Gregg,
Seattle Executive Fitness
October 15, 2012
Worn Out Cybex Arm Curl (Biceps) Machine
When Merle Gregg first took over the gym at 511 Olive Way, the
Cybex Arm Curl, bicep, training machine was in medium shape. The arm pads were
showing some wear, but they were still okay. Over the course of the past year,
the arm wrests on the Cybex Arm Curl machine have become very worn.
Despite repeated requests from many members about this
machine, Merle Gregg and his staff have not repaired it. The first photograph of
it below, shows its condition a year ago. The second photograph of it below
shows it condition recently, after Merle Gregg and his staff crammed the
machine into the area that used to be the stretching room. Notice all the
cracks in the arm rest. One really has to wonder why the people who run Seattle
Executive Fitness won’t invest in replacing that worn out part of that machine.
Cybex Arm Curl machine a year ago, less worn |
Closeup of worn out arm pad on Cybex Arm Curl (bicep) machine. |
Labels:
511 Olive Way,
Arm Curl,
Cybex,
Cybex Arm Curl,
Cybex Arm Curl Machine,
Merle Gregg,
Seattle,
Seattle Executive Fitness,
worn,
worn out
September 21, 2012
Seattle Executive Fitness - Olive Way - Drastic Size Reduction!
It seems that with every passing week and month there are signs that Merle Gregg and his Seattle Executive Fitness gyms are in deep financial trouble. In an apparently desperate attempt to save monthly rental expenses, Merle Gregg is reducing the size of the third floor workout area at the Olive Way Seattle Executive Fitness location. There are also rumors that the current ground floor entrance area is going to become a separate retail business of some sort, forcing members to enter the gym through the medical/dental building main entrance, which would also eliminate the gym's separate 511 Olive Way street level presence.
Below is a photo of what was once the stretching and calisthenics area on the third floor of the Olive Way Seattle Executive Fitness gym. Currently that section of the gym's workout area, possibly as much as a thousand square feet, has been partitioned off and covered with drywall in preparation for painting. The portion of the gym that is currently the upper floor lounge and rock climbing wall, on the other side of the construction area is apparently going to be become a publicly accessible area that will no longer be part of the gym's workout facilities. That space is expected to house the florist shop that is currently a street precense florist shop. How the florist shop will ever survive without sidewalk visibility is a mystery, but instead of having a gym with a lounge and rock climb wall, the area of the gym that was once the rock climbing wall will soon be open to the public with a florist, a cafe, and without direct access to the rock climbing area for gym members.
Seattle Executive Fitness reducing size of workout area. |
A large portion of the circuit training equipment has been crammed into the remaining half of what was once the stretching and calisthenics area. Meanwhile, the personal trainers have been left to work with clients alongside people stretching, in a reduced size area where both the stretching and calisthenics activities will occur and where the personal trainers will have to work with their clients. The photograph below shows part of the new reduced size stretching area, across from the stairwell and the personal trainers' scheduling station on the third floor of the gym, the gym's primary workout spaces.
The reduced size stretching and calisthenics area at Seattle Executive Fitness on Olive Way |
The photograph below shows the jumbled mess of crammed in, worn out, outdated second tier, mostly Sybex brand, selectorized circuit training equipment that now fills what was once the stretching, toning, calisthenics area of the gym. It seems like it should be obvious to existing members, and to any prospective customer taking a tour of the gym, that anyone who would cram circuit training equipment into a room in such a haphazard way dozen have one ounce of concern for providing gym memberships with a quality workout experience. There just isn't anything about the mess pictured below that any reasonable person would characterize as "Executive" by any stretch of a normal person's imagination.
Aging Cybex and LifeFitness brand selectorized circuit training machines crammed into previous stretching area. |
If the owner of Seattle Executive Fitness, Merle Gregg, would have spent more time focusing on making and keeping his gym a quality, friendly, well equpped, well maintained, place to workout, he would probably more customers, more long term dependable revenue, and no desperate need to find ways to to scrimp on monthly overhead just to survive. With some attention paid to maintaining equipment, doing things like providing an adequate number of cardio theater television channels, honest billing with customers, instead of getting of having rightfully disgruntled customers who describe all disastrous state of affairs at his gyms on web review sites like yelp.com, he would probably have customers ready and will to tell their friends his gyms are a great place to workout. Instead Merle Gregg has been lying in comments on yelp.com that somehow the drastic reduction in the size of the Olive Way gym is somehow an expansion. Working on building and maintaining a good place to workout doesn't seem to be what is on Merle Gregg's mind at all. Merle Gregg's unequivocally desperate changes at Seattle Executive Fitness, and his lack of action and attention to maintaining a quality gym, imply that he has everything on his mind except finding ways to make his gyms excellent workout facilities that keep members happy. The fact is that Seattle Executive Fitness members are very unhappy about the obvious signs of deterioration they see as they workout at the Olive Way gym.
Labels:
construction,
florist,
florist shop,
gym size reduced,
Merle Gregg,
Seattle Executive Fitness
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