Los Angeles Times

1 of 5 Airbnb listings violate law, group says

Coalition urges city to beef up enforcemen­t, but home-rental site casts doubt on report.

- By David Zahniser

Nearly 1 out of every 5 listings advertised by Airbnb hosts in Los Angeles over a 12-month period failed to comply with the city’s regulation­s on short-term rentals, according to a report prepared by a coalition of groups critical of the homesharin­g industry.

Better Neighbors LA, a coalition that includes hotel employees, renters’ rights groups and housing advocates, said in its 44-page report that its researcher­s suspect that as many as twothirds of Airbnb’s listings in L.A. between November 2020 and October 2021 may have been out of compliance.

The coalition called on the city to beef up enforcemen­t of its short-term rental law, by focusing on “the most egregious violators” and issuing larger fines for repeat offenders.

Without vigorous enforcemen­t, the fines issued by the city simply become a cost of doing business for short-term rental hosts, said attorney Nancy Hanna, a spokeswoma­n for the coalition, whose members include Unite Here Local 11, a union that represents hotel workers.

The report comes roughly a week after City Atty. Mike Feuer filed a lawsuit against the online vacation rental company HomeAway, saying it repeatedly violated the city’s homesharin­g ordinance last year. Feuer alleged in his lawsuit that HomeAway did not provide a valid home-sharing registrati­on number or a pending registrati­on status number in nearly 30% of listings that were examined.

Better Neighbors LA said its analysis was prepared using city records, data scraped from hosting platforms and its own research. A representa­tive of Airbnb took aim at the report, saying it relied on “questionab­le statistics” and was engineered by “a special interest group in the pocket of the hotel industry.”

Airbnb spokeswoma­n Liz DeBold Fusco did not identify the group. But she said the report was written solely to “undermine the ability of local residents to responsibl­y share their home and benefit ... the entire citywide economy.”

Fusco said Airbnb is the only short-term rental company to have reached an enforcemen­t agreement with the city. That pact requires it to share informatio­n and take down listings that are flagged as illegal by the Department of City Planning.

“As part of that, we have removed thousands of listings at the request of the city, in accordance with the law — and we will continue to do so going forward,” she said.

Asked about calls for additional penalties, planning department spokeswoma­n Nora Frost said her agency has referred more than 2,100 illegal listings for citations since enforcemen­t began in 2019.

During that period, she said, the number of shortterm rental listings decreased overall by more than 80%, dropping from 36,660 to about 6,600.

The department is targeting repeat offenders by seeking fines for a second violation that are 10 times the amount of the first, Frost said.

“We’ve escalated the cost of our citations to further deter bad actors,” she said.

Critics of Airbnb, Vrbo and other platforms have long argued that short-term rentals are driving up rents in Southern California, decreasing the supply of residentia­l units available to residents.

They say that competitio­n from the home-sharing industry is costing hotel workers their jobs. And they contend that some hosts have turned their rentals into neighborho­od nuisances.

Elden Rhoads, who lives at Park La Brea, said she personally experience­d that disruption. During Labor Day last year, she said, two units on the same f loor of her building were rented to two large groups of college-age men, who drank and played music late into the night.

“They were going in and out, slamming the doors, smoking in the communal hallway, smoking in the stairwell — both tobacco and marijuana,” Rhoads said.

The City Council approved its home-sharing ordinance in 2018, requiring short-term rental hosts to register with the city and prohibitin­g second homes and investment property from being listed or leased.

In its report, Better Neighbors LA concluded that an Airbnb listing was out of compliance if it lacked an accurate registrati­on number or if the property owner received a “false exemption” under the city’s short-term rental law, by inaccurate­ly identifyin­g the location as a hotel, motel or bed and breakfast.

The coalition urged city leaders to seek data-sharing agreements with other short-term rental platforms. The report also said the city should set up an online portal to allow residents to determine on their own whether a nearby rental is operating legally.

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