Chicago Sun-Times

Rahm’s 2% home-sharing surcharge for domestic violence support gets OK

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s plan to tax Chicago’s burgeoning home-sharing industry yet again to bankroll a 50 percent increase in shelter capacity and support services for domestic violence victims breezed through a City Council committee Wednesday amid calls to hit Airbnb and others even harder.

Emanuel wants to slap the industry with an additional 2 percent surcharge. Ald. Roberto Maldonado (26th) raised the possibilit­y of upping the ante — to 3 percent.

“That industry in the city of Chicago has grown. So they are not hurting. I foresee that this is going to keep going up,” Maldonado said.

“We need more funding for domestic violence victims in the city of Chicago. And it would be a shame if we cannot capitalize on at least an additional percentage. I want to propose it as a motion on the floor.”

Maldonado subsequent­ly withdrew his motion, only after being told that domestic violence shelters would need time to add the capacity that would be supported by additional funding.

Ald. Michele Smith (43rd), whose Lincoln Park ward is home to more than 500 Airbnb listings, led the charge against the 2016 ordinance that regulated the home-sharing industry.

On Wednesday, Smith said she supports the concept of using home-sharing surcharges to support domestic violence victims. But she argued that the city is paying more to regulate the home-sharing industry than it’s taking in from license fees and surcharges.

Those expenses include: $1.2 million to build a database; $240,000 for administra­tion by the Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection; and $570,000 for attorney and other staffers.

“The city had to take on the regulation of a whole new business that was really operating completely illegally in the city. … We have taken on an industry that, just to get a computer program up to regulate them, has been over $1 million,” Smith said.

Under questionin­g from Smith, city attorneys disclosed that the city collected $320,000 in registrati­on fees from Airbnb last year and $385,000 so far this year, thanks to 1,150 additional units.

That includes a $10,000 licensing fee for Airbnb to act as an intermedia­ry and a $60-per-unit fee on top of that.

Smith noted that “even today, there are thousands of units on the Airbnb platform alone that have not been officially registered because of the process” that takes so long.

“Airbnb is probably, frankly, delighted at the P.R. of doing this because they’re not paying. They’re passing this along to their consumers,” she said.

“My concern is that the company itself is depriving our city budget of funds for these services while not paying appropriat­e fees to regulate their own industry, which is something that the inspector general brought up in his latest audit. That our fees, which are designed to match the cost of regulation, are not consistent. It seems to me that we should be appropriat­ely charging the regulated industry for the cost of administer­ing that industry so that our city budget isn’t subsidizin­g that regulation.”

If the full City Council approves the new home sharing fee advanced by the License Committee, the total city tax on the “gross rental or leasing charge of any shared housing unit or vacation rental” would be 6 percent.

An existing 4 percent fee earmarked for homeless services generated $3 million during the first year and another $2.7 million during the tenmonth period ending in April of this year.

The new surcharge is expected to raise $1.3 million a year dedicated exclusivel­y toward adding shelter beds to the city’s existing inventory of 140, creating transition­al housing and bolstering support services for victims of domestic violence.

Since the WINGS domestic violence shelter opened 2½ years ago, “their beds have been filled every single night. 30,000 stays. Every night, they’re filled helping families in crisis,” said Ald. Matt O’Shea (19th), City Council champion for domestic violence victims.

“We need to do whatever we can to increase space. I would hope that we can find more locations to help families across the city. Adding on to home-sharing is a small price to pay.”

 ??  ?? Ald. Roberto Maldonado
Ald. Roberto Maldonado
 ??  ?? Ald. Michele Smith
Ald. Michele Smith

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