Times Colonist

Vancouver unveils regulation­s on short-term rentals

- LINDA GIVETASH

VANCOUVER — The City of Vancouver is moving to legalize shortterm rental accommodat­ion such as Airbnb, but operators will only be able to advertise their principal residence.

Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson said Wednesday that new regulation­s to be enacted next week are designed to protect and free up rental housing in response to a critically low vacancy rate.

“The goal of the city is to restore some of our long-term rental and take a balanced approach, making sure we are protecting rental stock at the same time that we’re enabling supplement­al income for people who are using Airbnb and other short-term rental platforms,” he said.

There are about 6,600 shortterm rentals posted online, and more than 80 per cent will remain legal under the program, city officials said.

Operators will be required to apply for a business licence by Sept. 1 and include that number in their listing, which Airbnb has agreed to make as a requiremen­t on its platform.

Secondary suites are not allowed on the platform and city staff say there are about 1,000 units currently listed that are not an operator’s primary home.

Robertson said most of those units should go back on the rental market or be subject to a $1,000 a day fine as of Sept. 1.

Airbnb spokeswoma­n Alex Dagg said the agreement reached with the city, which also requires the company to share quarterly data and user contact informatio­n, is the first of its kind in Canada. She said other jurisdicti­ons globally have implemente­d a similar partnershi­p.

“I’m always reminded how progressiv­e the Vancouver community is,” she said. “This agreement today is an important step to making home sharing easier while giving the city the tools it needs for enforcemen­t.”

She said the informatio­n being given to the city will help enforce the new regulation­s, while allowing users to continue to list their homes with ease.

The city’s general manager of developmen­t, Kaye Krishna, said about 88 per cent of all online short-term rental listings are posted on Airbnb.

Other platforms are in negotiatio­ns with the city, Krishna said. The Expedia Group, which owns the platforms VRBO and HomeAway, has agreed to educate users on the new regulation­s and encourage them to obtain licences, she said.

The cost of the licence is $49 annually, and operators must have permission from their landlord or condo board and adhere to fire and safety standards.

The city has set up an online applicatio­n, which Krishna said takes only minutes to complete, that will launch next week.

The city has hired bylaw enforcemen­t officers to monitor violations and issue tickets.

“Housing is for homes first and be used as a business after that and be taxed as a business appropriat­ely,” Robertson said.

The new regulation­s, paired with the city’s recent empty-home tax, are “tools that can boost the supply of long-term rental, and again, make sure we are getting the best use of our housing stock across the city,” he said.

The city’s vacancy rate is at 0.8 per cent, Robertson said.

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