Las Vegas Review-Journal

Short-term rental approval given

Fee included in Henderson rules

- By Blake Apgar Las Vegas Review-journal

The Henderson City Council voted unanimousl­y Tuesday night to allow the operation of short-term vacation rentals in residentia­l areas.

The move sets Henderson apart from other Las Vegas Valley municipali­ties, which either do not allow or have voted to limit short-term rentals, such as those on Airbnb.

“We have to do something to be able to regulate these,” Ward 4 Councilman Dan Stewart said during the committee meeting. “We can’t do it right now. If we just don’t do anything, we’re just sticking our heads in the sand, and it’s just going to keep being the way it is.”

Henderson officials

suspect that hundreds of short-term units are already operating in the city without approval, but if those rentals operated under the new rules, the city could bring in nearly $370,000.

Under Henderson’s new rules, those who rent out their homes would have to pay an annual $820 registrati­on fee. Henderson code currently allows short-term rentals only in commercial tourist zoning areas.

The city will require a minimum two-night stay as part of the changes. Owners will also be required to take a class, pay for insurance and provide a note to the city saying the rental does not violate homeowners associatio­n rules. State-licensed property managers are exempt from the class.

The new law prohibits the use of rental units for weddings, private events or parties.

Ward 3 Councilman John Marz told attendees that running a rental unit comes at a high cost, and he thinks the number of rental units in the city will actually drop when regulation­s kick in Oct. 14.

“But even if it stays the same, the important thing to me is that we protect the neighbors. And the only way we can protect our neighborho­ods is enforce the codes and the ordinances that we have on the books, and we don’t have them,” Marz said.

Council members heard testimony from about 30 people, including residents and industry representa­tives.

Cindy Halley spoke in opposition to the measure and expressed frustratio­n with what she considered a lack of transparen­cy in the developmen­t of the changes.

“I understand it’s been in developmen­t The only way we can protect our neighborho­ods is enforce the codes and the ordinances that we have on the books, and we don’t have them. for over a year, and there are many, many citizens here in Henderson that have heard nothing about this,” Halley told council members.

Other residents expressed enforcemen­t concerns.

The city plans to partner with a company that will check rental websites to see which properties are

breaking the rules. Violators will be subject to fines.

If neighbors have complaints, they will be able to call a complaint hotline. Someone associated with the rental property will have to be contacted within 45 minutes, and the complaint must be resolved within two hours under the changes.

Mike Jensen, of Nevada Vacation Rental Profession­als, told council members that the majority of those who stay at short-term vacation rentals are families or convention­eers.

“They do not want to stay in the casinos because they want to stay away from the transients and the riffraff and the foolishnes­s that goes on on the Strip,” Jensen said.

A 30-day compliance grace period will end in November.

Contact Blake Apgar at bapgar@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5298. Follow @blakeapgar on Twitter.

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