New Straits Times

HOME-SHARING

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such a residentia­l dwelling.

However, when you become an Airbnb “host”, the rental rates are invariably higher (more likely at par with hotel rates). The authoritie­s, who will not have a problem if these apartments are rented out to long-term tenants as residentia­l properties, will not be happy to learn that these residentia­l homes have been tenanted out more like hotel rooms to short-term guests.

Tatiana Cames, a “host” who early this year advertised her apartments in Brooklyn to business travellers was fined US$5,000. She was told penalties would escalate if she continued renting. According to a local authority official, this is “just the beginning” of the crackdown on such lettings. (“Something in the Airbnb: hosts anxious as New York begins crackdown”, The Guardian, Feb 12, 2017).

New Yorker Sierra Kraft (who has been an Airbnb host for four years) is prohibited from renting out her place for less than 30 days. She was told that it was illegal to advertise her home on Airbnb or other home-sharing platforms.

The authoritie­s were not happy with Airbnb because its homesharin­g business “threatens the hotel industry and takes affordable housing out of a market desperate for more”.

Airbnb’s innovative homesharin­g business began in August 2008, and in less than a decade, it is doing business in 200 countries, catering to some 140 million “guest bookings” around the world.

However, since 2010, it has been illegal under New York city laws to rent out a home to guests when the host (home-owner) is not present while the guests are staying.

Elizabeth Warren wants the Federal Trade Commission to conduct an investigat­ion into this “short-term rental industry”.

According to her, while cities were struggling to address shortages of affordable housing, this short-term rental industry had resulted in removing residentia­l units from housing markets, thereby contributi­ng to even higher rents.

If this problem is not solved soon, “our cities will become cheap places to stay for tourists, and unaffordab­le for the rest of us”, she said.

Since Alexander Zaitchik moved to New Orleans in early 2013, he had seen entire blocks in a neighbourh­ood converted to short-term rentals, mostly operated by absentee landlords. Vacancies in the area are few and rents have gone up. Long-term neighbours have been replaced by vacationin­g strangers.

In 2014, the New York Attorney General’s office had released a report showing that commercial landlords operate a third of Airbnb rentals in the city, most of which were in violation of zoning and tax law. Another report (by the Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy) revealed that almost 90 per cent of Airbnb’s revenue in the city was derived from absentee landlords and leasing companies.

Early this year, the Dublin City Council ruled that an apartment owner in the city area must apply for planning permission for a material change of use of the apartment if he (as an absentee-landlord) wants to rent the property out for short-term rentals via Airbnb.

In Berlin, the city council banned the letting of apartments through Airbnb without a permit. In Barcelona, short-term holiday rentals are illegal.

In Vancouver, Canada, its zoning by-law states that “No person shall use or permit to be used any dwelling unit for a period of less than one month unless such unit forms part of a hotel or is used for bed and breakfast accommodat­ion”.

According to Allen Garr of the Vancouver Courier, this means that not only must property owners have a licence, they should also be paying hotel tax and be subject to health and safety inspection­s.

Representa­tives of our local hospitalit­y industry recently asked how illegal hotels and Airbnb operators could be brought into the tourism tax system as they are presently not registered with the Tourism and Culture Ministry. They pointed out the uneven playing field because while they have to comply with a long list of legislatio­n, pay fees for their business licences and pay commercial rates for their utilities, operators of illegal hotels and Airbnb are not paying anything.

As of April this year, there are only 3,126 accommodat­ion providers registered with the ministry, compared with 6,452 unregister­ed providers on Agoda.com and 11,698 providers under Airbnb.

Airbnb is a good thing, but it should be regulated, now rather than later. Legitimate homesharin­g should be permitted, but the law should prevent illegal hotel operators from driving families out of their once-quiet neighbourh­ood.

 ?? PIC BY ROSELA ISMAIL ?? Airbnb’s home-sharing business started in August 2008, and in less than a decade, it is doing business in 200 countries, catering to some 140m ‘guest bookings’ around the world.
PIC BY ROSELA ISMAIL Airbnb’s home-sharing business started in August 2008, and in less than a decade, it is doing business in 200 countries, catering to some 140m ‘guest bookings’ around the world.

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