Times Colonist

Toronto council considers new short-term rental rules

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TORONTO — Politician­s in Toronto will be scrutinizi­ng proposed rules for short-term rentals this week that could spell major changes for those who offer secondary residences for rent on platforms such as Airbnb.

Among the raft of regulation­s going before city councillor­s is a rule that would ban short-term rentals of homes that aren’t the landlord’s primary dwelling.

Some tenants are heralding the proposed regulation­s as much needed in a city grappling with high rents and low vacancy rates, while those who offer secondary residences on home-sharing platforms like Airbnb argue the rules would be punitive.

Under rules put forward by city staff, short-term rentals of 28 days or less would be allowed in up to three rooms of any home in Toronto as long as they are in the landlord’s “principal residence.”

The original proposal allowed landlords to use separate units in a principal residence — such as a basement apartment — for short-term rentals. The city’s planning committee rejected that aspect of the plan last month.

If the rules are approved, the city would create a registry of short-term rental landlords who would have to declare that their rental property was their principle residence and pay an annual fee of $50.

Last month in Victoria, councillor­s agreed to move ahead with new regulation­s restrictin­g short-term vacation rentals despite strong resistance from many homeowners who rent their secondary suites through platforms such as Airbnb. A similar debate is unfolding in Toronto. The proposed regulation­s in that city are being hailed as a necessary step by Torontonia­ns who say they’re struggling to find affordable or available rental properties in the city.

“If they do in fact restrict them to principal residences, I think it would free up a good number of the properties currently listed on Airbnb,” said Jackie Porter, a lawyer whose family rents a multibedro­om house in Toronto’s east end.

Porter said she and her husband, a professor at the University of Toronto, found that multi-bedroom houses in the city centre, close to the university’s downtown campus, can cost around $4,000 per month and are in short supply.

“The state of the rental market now is, if you don’t contact someone about a place for rent within 24 or 48 hours, you’re out of the running, you might as well not even bother,” Porter said.

“It’s no great mystery why,” she added. “If you can rent [short term] to a tourist for $300 or $400 a night, you’ll never get that from a long-term rental.”

About 10,800 Airbnbs were rented out in Toronto in 2016, the company said. Airbnb estimates that over three quarters of their Toronto landlords are renting out space in their principal residence.

More than half of all Airbnb listings are in the city’s downtown, and the vast majority — more than 80 per cent — accept only short-term bookings, the company said.

Fairbnb, a coalition founded by a Toronto-area hospitalit­y workers’ union to advocate for Airbnb legislatio­n, says city hall must ensure that rental units are preserved for long-term renters, not vacation rentals.

“We have no problem with the typical Airbnb host,” spokesman Thorben Wieditz said. “We have a problem with those people that lease or buy properties as investment­s and turn them into ‘ghost hotels.’ … Those are the properties that not only eliminate rental properties [but] drive up rental costs.”

Some Airbnb hosts, however, take issue with Toronto’s proposed rules.

Kevin Makra, an Airbnb landlord for the past three years, said he hosts visitors in a condo he owns that’s down the street from his home in downtown Toronto.

He used to rent to long-term tenants but a bad experience — tenants’ cheques started bouncing and he had to navigate a complex bureaucrat­ic system to get his money — steered him toward Airbnb, he said.

Airbnb landlords are often unfairly portrayed as selfish business people only out to make a buck, but they should be recognized as part of the local community, he said.

“I was born and raised in Toronto,” Makra said. “All the issues that people care about, I care about as well, whether it’s employment, education or affordable housing. I’m a very strong proponent of making positive rules that will help this city.”

 ??  ?? Kevin Makra says Airbnb landlords are being unfairly stigmatize­d.
Kevin Makra says Airbnb landlords are being unfairly stigmatize­d.

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