Townsville Bulletin

Councillor­s call to act over short-term stays

- KIRRA GRIMES

WHITSUNDAY councillor­s are pushing for a planning scheme and policy reform over concerns short-term accommodat­ion approvals were strangling housing supply.

Division 2 Councillor Al Grundy requested a review of the current planning scheme requiremen­ts in relation to short-term accommodat­ion and Airbnbs, saying opening up more “leisure beds” in Airlie Beach had reduced the amount of “liveable beds” and this was making life difficult for people moving to the area for work. Cr Grundy suggested the council look at how

other parts of the state were handling the growth of the short-term accommodat­ion sector, calling it an area with “policy shortcomin­gs”.

At the same June 30 council meeting in Bowen, fellow Division 2 Cr Jan Clifford moved to increase internal updates on new developmen­t applicatio­ns decided under delegated authority, particular­ly material change of use applicatio­ns, from monthly to weekly.

She said that would allow councillor­s to provide more informed responses to residents’ questions and complaints about short-term accommodat­ion approvals.

Cr Clifford she was “held up in the supermarke­t on a daily basis” about such applicatio­ns and “looked like an idiot” when she could not provide a proper response because the council’s developmen­t assessment team had signed off on something without a council vote. “People ask me ‘ how did you let that happen?’ when I didn’t even know it was happening,” Cr Clifford said.

“Short-term accommodat­ion is a particular concern in my part of the world, and where it triggers things outside the council plan, we should know about it, ahead of time.

“At the moment, unless we sit there and trawl through everything in the middle of the night, we don’t know.

“I just would like to know and not look stupid out there when I don’t know.”

Developmen­t services director Neil Mcgaffin believed “there is very little concern throughout the community over short-term accommodat­ion”, but said the council had been looking at places such as Noosa to see how their council was handling complaints around short-term rentals, such as noisy parties in residentia­l areas.

Mr Mcgaffin’s suggestion to any resident concerned about a short term rental in their neighbourh­ood was to make a log book of the issues, noting times and dates and take it to the council.

“I would encourage people to make submission­s, but we need a body of evidence,” he said.

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Airlie Beach.

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