The Gold Coast Bulletin

UNLOCKED AND LOADED

Exclusive: Council swipes keys planted by Airbnb rental rorters

- CAMPBELL GELLIE campbell.gellie@news.com.au

GOLD Coast City Council is cutting down key boxes chained to power poles to stop Airbnb renters illegally letting out apartments.

Unit owners are hiding keys for visitors so they can flout body corporate laws, escape increased insurance and security payments and avoid having their property rezoned — and it is driving their neighbours crazy.

GOLD Coast City Council is cutting down key boxes chained to power poles to stop homeowners illegally renting units to Airbnb guests.

Authoritie­s said apartment owners were dodging $500,000 fines by asking visitors to find keys in hidden spots such as padlocked boxes, garden beds and under witches hats.

They are doing it to flout body corporate laws, escape increased insurance and security payments, and to avoid having their property rezoned as short-term accommodat­ion.

Fed-up body corporates have written to Gold Coast and state politician­s claiming their unit blocks are being overrun by illegal guests. They are also concerned law-abiding owners may not be covered from fire or damage that starts in adjourning apartments.

“(Unit owners) are putting chains around poles on council property,” Southport councillor Dawn Crichlow said.

“Someone gets out their phone and the host gives them their code. They open their lock and take the key and swipe to get into a highrise.

“The council cut the chains off the power poles and you know what they are doing now? They are burying them in gardens and putting witches hats down so you know where to dig to find the keys.”

About 6700 Gold Coast homeowners rent their property on AirBnB. All up, 15,000 use sub-letting websites citywide.

Under the State Government’s Planning Act introduced in 2016, it is an offence to rent out a residentia­l property with- out approval. Those caught face a maximum fine of $567,675.

A council spokespers­on yesterday said a fine was yet to be issued for the offence in the past three years. However, the number of complaints had increased from 32 in 2016 to 54 in the first four months of 2018.

The spokespers­on said council officers had cut down key boxes chained to poles in the past few months.

AirBnB Head of Policy Australia and New Zealand Brent Thomas said the sub-letting website was helping more ratepayers than ever before.

He said, on average, Gold Coast Airbnb hosts earned $1500 through the Commonweal­th Games period.

“Hosting is a big responsibi­lity and we expect our hosts to meet our community’s high standards,” he said. “Home sharing is achieving what most government­s, including Gold Coast Council, could only dream of. It is lifting living standards and easing the sky-high cost-of-living without spending a cent of taxpayer dollars.”

Cr Crichlow said those exploiting the law needed to be scrutinise­d as it was affecting other property owners.

“If there is a fire then there is no fire insurance because the building is not approved for short-term accommodat­ion.”

Unit Owners of Queensland president Wayne Stevens said he had written to both the council and State Government about the issue.

“The complaints are endless because people buy into property believing it is residentia­l only to find out owners are using it for short-term accommodat­ion,” said Mr Stevens, who lives on the Gold Coast.

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