The Hamilton Spectator

City council backs short-term rental regulation­s

Initiative aims to shore up long-term rental stock along with reducing safety and noise complaints

- TEVIAH MORO TEVIAH MORO IS A REPORTER AT THE SPECTATOR. TMORO@THESPEC.COM

Hamilton councillor­s have approved a licensing system for shortterm rentals that bars them outside of primary residences.

The new rules to reel in the Airbnb-style operations passed on a 13-3 council vote Wednesday. They include licensing, registrati­on and inspection requiremen­ts as well as fees.

Operators are also prohibited from offering short-term rentals in homes they don’t live in.

The regulation­s to start in June are meant to shore up long-term rental stock, and respond to complaints about safety and noise at some residences.

Coun. Esther Pauls, however, said the “overwhelmi­ng majority” of short-term-rental owners run tight ships as a means of extra income.

Pauls said “too many restrictio­ns” can have a negative effect on property owners and those who rely on short-stay options alike.

The latter cohort includes not only tourists, but also articling law students and health-care profession­als on short contracts, she said.

The Ward 7 councillor suggested a “less intrusive” approach that could involve a licence-and-demerit point system to deal with “a few bad apples or actors.”

In green-lighting the bylaw, council scrapped an initial staff proposal to place 120-night annual limit a home could be rented for short stays.

Last week, tenant Emily Power told councillor­s that staff’s original “strong” regulation­s could help push hundreds of apartments back into the long-term market.

Power, an urban planning graduate student who has studied the local rental market, noted there are more than 1,300 active short-term stay listings in Hamilton.

“The rise of Airbnb in Hamilton has coincided with rising rents and an increasing number of evictions,” she added.

City politician­s have heard from dozens of homeowners — via letters, virtually or in person — about the contentiou­s proposal.

Some point to short-term rentals as preferable income generator to bitter experience­s with problemati­c tenants as convention­al landlords.

In a letter, the Realtors Associatio­n of Hamilton-Burlington called the bylaw “unfairly restrictiv­e,” including the limitation of shortterm rentals to primary residences.

“As economic inequality worsens, wages stagnate and inflation rises, many Hamiltonia­ns depend on the income generated from short-term rental units to make ends meet,” Lou Piriano wrote.

 ?? JOHN RENNISON THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO ?? Hamilton’s new rules to reel in the Airbnb-style operations passed on a 13-3 council vote Wednesday.
JOHN RENNISON THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO Hamilton’s new rules to reel in the Airbnb-style operations passed on a 13-3 council vote Wednesday.

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