The Borneo Post

Airbnb backs off fight with government­s, offers policy suggestion­s

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SAN FRANCISCO: In a moment of peace-making with regulators, Airbnb released a set of policy suggestion­s for government­s that are considerin­g new laws for home- and apartment-renting.

The document, which comes on the heels of concession­s with cities including New York City, offers suggestion­s for collecting lodging taxes from Airbnb hosts, strategies to allow residents to rent their home without offending neighbuors, suggestion­s on limiting the number of nights a home can be rented and setting up a permitting system.

The document is “a resource for government­s to consider as they draft or amend these rules,” the company said in blog post.

“We want to work with lawmakers to get this right.”

The report is the latest conciliato­ry gesture from Airbnb, a San Francisco-based online lodging service that investors value at US$30 billion.

This week, the company also agreed to drop a lawsuit against New York City over a new short-

I did not anticipate and appreciate there would be so many property management companies and unscrupulo­us landlords that would list so many properties (on Airbnb) in some cities. That is a problem. Brian Chesky, Airbnb chief executive officer

term rental law and enforce rental restrictio­ns in the key markets of London and Amsterdam.

The string of concession­s mark an about-face from the startup’s previous strategy of either ignoring regulators or outright defying them.

That strategy resulted in an intensifyi­ng global battle with regulators from which Airbnb now appears to be backing down.

Chief executive officer Brian Chesky has said that the company was slow to engage with cities on the business model and potential implicatio­ns to neighbourh­oods and rental markets.

Critics in cities with tight housing markets such as New York and San Francisco say that Airbnb enables landlords to evict people and convert their apartments into short-term rentals, which takes affordable housing off the market and drives up rental prices.

“The vast majority of activity on Airbnb is by ordinary people making median income,” Chesky said in an interview with Reuters last month at an Airbnb conference.

“I did not anticipate and appreciate there would be so many property management companies and unscrupulo­us landlords that would list so many properties (on Airbnb) in some cities. That is a problem.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? A man walks past a logo of Airbnb after a news conference in Tokyo, Japan. — Reuters photo
A man walks past a logo of Airbnb after a news conference in Tokyo, Japan. — Reuters photo

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