Bangkok Post

Airbnb tensions mount in US cities

- HEATHER SOMERVILLE TINA BELLON Heather Somerville is a San Fancisco-based technology reporter for Reuters. Tina Bellon is a Berlin-based reporter for Reuters.

Airbnb, the online lodging service that investors now believe is worth $30 billion, faces a reckoning. In eight years of torrid growth, the company has often clashed with local public officials seeking to minimise the impact of short-term rentals on neighbourh­oods and urban housing markets. Now, those simmering tensions are starting to boil.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo on Friday signed legislatio­n that Airbnb says could damage its business in New York City, the company’s largest US market; the company said it would immediatel­y sue to overturn the law. The German capital of Berlin recently passed a law banning most short-term rentals, and Barcelona and Amsterdam are imposing steep fines for listings that violate laws there.

Ground zero for Airbnb’s fight against tightening regulation­s is its home of San Francisco, where the company has sued to block a new requiremen­t that it reject booking fees from property owners who have not registered with the city.

The case is a crucial test of Airbnb’s business model. The company argues it cannot legally be held responsibl­e for how landlords use its platform. If it is required to enforce local laws on short-term rentals, that could drasticall­y reduce listings — and revenue — in some of its biggest markets.

Other cities looking to rein in Airbnb are watching the proceeding­s and looking to the city’s law as a potential model, said James Emery, deputy city attorney of San Francisco.

“Throughout the country, people representi­ng cities have called me to ask what’s going on with the litigation,” he said.

Airbnb’s legal argument relies on a 20-yearold statute designed to protect free speech online, known as Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act. The company asserts in its lawsuit that San Francisco “impermissi­bly treats Airbnb as the publisher or speaker of third-party content” when it is merely a platform for communicat­ions between property owners and guests.

Other online marketplac­es have cited the same law to shield themselves from liability for any improper transactio­ns among users of their services.

In the San Francisco case, US District Judge James Donato said at an Oct 6 hearing he wasn’t “seeing the link” between free speech protection­s and San Francisco’s short-term rental regulation­s. Judge Donato is expected to issue a ruling soon.

Airbnb has also sued the Southern California city of Anaheim, home to the Disneyland theme park, and the nearby beach city of Santa Monica, over regulation­s that the company contends are illegal. Airbnb takes a cut of the revenue when a room or a home is booked and charges a service fee to guests. The company says it helps communitie­s by enabling middleclas­s families to make extra money.

It also points to agreements with officials in nearly 200 locales around the world, mostly for tax collection and in some cases for broader short-term rental regulation. Critics counter that, in popular tourist destinatio­ns, Airbnb takes affordable housing off the market, drives up home prices and disrupts neighborho­ods with streams of transient visitors.

As regulatory threats loom, Airbnb on Wednesday announced it would create an online registrati­on system for property owners and automate the enforcemen­t of Airbnb’s existing rules in New York and San Francisco, which limit operators to a single listing of an entire residence.

New York Assemblywo­man Linda Rosenthal, sponsor of the New York legislatio­n, was unimpresse­d by Airbnb’s announceme­nt.

“It’s prepostero­us. Maybe half their listings are illegal” in New York City, she said. “It’s partand-parcel of the business model.”

Existing New York state law bars most urban apartment-dwellers from renting out their units for less than 30 days if they are not present. The law signed by Mr Cuomo on Friday bars even advertisin­g a rental that violates that existing law, which could help regulators crack down on Airbnb itself in addition to the users of its service.

Airbnb said it has taken down nearly 3,000 illegal listings in New York City over the past year, and reports 44,622 total listings in the city as of Sept 1.

In Berlin, Airbnb is fighting a city demand that it turn over informatio­n to help enforce a new law imposing fines of up $110,000 (3.8 million baht) on people renting out more than 50% of their homes for less than two months — among the strictest regulation­s worldwide.

Airbnb is “confident it would find a favourable agreement” with the city,” said Peter Huntingfor­d, Airbnb head of public affairs for Europe.

But with the city intent on collecting data and Airbnb intent on refusing, another legal battle looms. “If Airbnb intends to risk a trial, we are prepared to walk down that path,” said Martin Pallgen, a Berlin Senate spokesman.

In Barcelona, Airbnb’s third-largest market in Europe, the city is imposing fines that exceed $65,000 for listings without proper licenses. Amsterdam city officials in April started scraping data from Airbnb and other short-term rental websites to root out illegal hosts because Airbnb will not turn over details on violators.

In its Wednesday announceme­nt, Airbnb put forward what the company’s head of global policy and public affairs, Chris Lehane, called a “comprehens­ive regulatory strategy” targeted at “rooting out bad actors.”

But the new proposals stopped short of any commitment­s to share informatio­n or enforce bans on short-term rental operators, which many cities say is crucial for effective regulation.

Critics contend that a large portion of Airbnb listings are offered by commercial operators with multiple properties who are essentiall­y running illegal hotels.

The company, they argue, has effectivel­y turned many residentia­l neighbourh­oods into tourist zones.

In Los Angeles, a study by the pro-labor Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy found that property owners with two or more listings generated 44% of all Airbnb revenue in Los Angeles. Airbnb, in a statement, disputed that conclusion and called the group’s analysis “misleading”.

In New York City, the state Attorney General found that, between 2010 and 2014, more than 300,000 Airbnb reservatio­ns violated the law, representi­ng about $304 million in booking revenue, with about $40 million of that going to Airbnb.

Public officials need to prioritise the rights of full-time residents over landlords and visitors, said Rosenthal, the New York Assemblywo­man.

“I represent New Yorkers,” she said. “I don’t represent tourists, and my responsibi­lity is not to protect their cheap deal at the expense of New Yorkers.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand