The Guardian (Charlottetown)

A different view of short-term rentals

- LAURA K. BIRD Laura K. Bird is a Charlottet­own resident.

I was grateful to see that the first sentence in Stacy and Richard Toms' opinion piece published in The Guardian on Nov. 24th clearly labelled Airbnbs as a problem.

I was genuinely puzzled by the headline indicating that the positive side of short-term rentals is rarely discussed because, at every meeting I have ever attended where short-term rental entreprene­urs are present, the positive impact on the tourism industry and the ability of the entreprene­ur to make money off their investment and even employ others has been clearly stated, multiple times.

Words like vilify, monopoly, small-business owner, scapegoat, dilemma, and discourage tend to stir up emotions in those that read them, creating a really specific picture from one point of view. You invested in the property to help fund your retirement which, from my perspectiv­e of a non-pension earning, often self-employed individual on the wrong side of 50, good for you! Yet, like my own RRSPs, there is no guarantee on a return in that investment.

Here is a different picture from my perspectiv­e. I arrived in 2009 and rented an all-inclusive three bedroom furnished apartment in a residentia­l neighbourh­ood near downtown Charlottet­own for $1,600 a month that allowed pets in a city with a vacancy rate comfortabl­y at 3.4 per cent.

Those who appeared to spend their days on the street often had a place to live. I still live in the same neighbourh­ood. The vacancy rate is zero per cent. There are more visible homeless people, and many I know are scared of being 'renovicted' and having to leave their neighbourh­ood and school zone, which some have had to do. For families with pets, this is an especially vulnerable position to be in.

When I moved into the neighbourh­ood, within two blocks were two other shortterm rentals – well maintained with owners that were on-site or nearby.

Now, when I walk my dog, I can pass 13 short-term rentals in a three or four block radius of where I live (a residentia­l neighbourh­ood). At the same time that these businesses are flourishin­g, residents are struggling to find housing – the houses and condos and apartments are still there but the priority is given to transient tourists instead of citizens.

Full disclosure: I am all for owner-occupied short-term rentals, and those who have invested in small Bed-and-Breakfasts, density, large rental increases due to supply and demand, and urban planning that puts vulnerable citizens near the services they need are my concerns.

Recently, the City of Toronto won a ruling in favour of its short-term rental bylaws that had been challenged by the larger short-term rental businesses that had financial means to mount a complaint.

Adjudicato­r Scott Tousaw wrote this in the ruling: "One fact is indisputab­le: each dedicated short-term rental unit displaces one permanent household. That household must find another place to live."

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