Toronto Star

Short-term rental rules headed to city council

Toronto licensing committee has endorsed suggestion­s for rental regulation­s

- JENNIFER PAGLIARO

The city’s licensing committee has sent unaltered regulation­s for shortterm rentals like those offered through Airbnb to council for final approval.

The vote Thursday followed a planning and growth committee meeting a day earlier that added additional restrictio­ns to the rules proposed by city staff.

With the city in the midst of an affordable housing crisis and the arrival of what have been coined “ghost hotels” — rows of houses or entire apartment buildings rented out as investment properties through various websites like Airbnb — city staff recommende­d regulation­s for shortterm rentals aimed at thwarting that kind of listing.

“We have a platform, a disruptive platform — the same thing that we had with Uber — but Airbnb and any other technologi­es, they’re here to stay,” said licensing committee chair Cesar Palacio on Thursday. “What has been done from our city staff, literally speaking, is bringing that sense of understand­ing how to move forward.”

On Wednesday, the planning and growth committee approved an additional motion from affordable housing advocate Councillor Ana Bailao that secondary suites, like a self-contained basement apartment, not be available for short-term rental.

“It is our responsibi­lity again to strike that balance between people being able to use their property for rentals under certain conditions and the responsibi­lity we have to maintain housing stock in the city of Toronto,” Mayor John Tory told reporters Thursday at city hall.

Tory said through staff recommenda­tions and changes proposed Wednesday he is “confident” the city is achieving that balance.

Some speakers at the licensing committee on Thursday, including a representa­tive of Airbnb, were generally accepting of the proposed rules but expressed concern about some specifics, including a 180-night cap on some listings.

City staff recommende­d that restrictio­n would be limited to those looking to rent out their entire home. Someone looking to rent out an additional bedroom could list that rental all year.

A motion from Councillor Jim Karygianni­s to increase fees for operators and force them to register with government-issued identifica­tion while proving they live in the home failed to secure any votes at licensing committee, with Tory’s appointed chair, Palacio, urging members to reject those changes.

Much of the regulation­s as recommende­d will rely on complaint-based enforcemen­t, some aspects of which have yet to be determined, such as with secondary suites, city licensing division head Tracey Cook told committee Thursday.

Anyone offering short-term rentals, under the recommende­d rules, would be required to pay an annual $50 registrati­on fee and provide contact informatio­n and identifica­tion deemed appropriat­e by Cook.

Council has the final say on the regulation­s, to be debated at a meeting starting Dec. 6.

 ?? AIRBNB ?? Under the new proposals, anyone offering short-term rentals would be required to pay an annual fee.
AIRBNB Under the new proposals, anyone offering short-term rentals would be required to pay an annual fee.

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