Orlando Sentinel

Rental owners wary of regulation

As home-sharing becomes big business, lawmakers considerin­g ownership limits

- By Mary Shanklin Staff Writer

Former Central Florida schoolteac­her Jennifer Frankenste­in Harris started renting out her first beach condo a decade ago and has since amassed 275 vacation properties, but she fears regulation­s could kill her business.

“We are faced with a lot of legislatio­n, mostly from the hotel industry,” she said. “We could lose billions of dollars of economic impact. People would lose jobs. We would lose tourists.”

In a mounting turf battle over Florida’s tourists, some vacationre­ntal owners say they want the right to rent out their houses or rooms as they see fit, while the hotel industry says such home sharing is a big business that needs more oversight. State and local lawmakers are considerin­g proposals that include limiting the number of short-term rentals a person or company can own.

Even with its share of homespun success stories, the home-sharing

industry is dominated by corporatio­ns including Airbnb, Expedia-HomeAway, TripAdviso­r and Wyndham. Google has entered the scene too. The powerhouse-backed business has gained traction throughout Central Florida. In early 2016 in Osceola County, vacation rentals outpaced traditiona­l hotels for tourist-tax collection­s.

Tax collection­s from Airbnb properties in Osceola, Orange, Lake and Seminole counties generated $34 million during 2016, according to the company.

HomeAway Chief Commercial Officer Jeff Hurst said much of the business comes from families and individual­s who would otherwise stay at the homes of friends or family — or skip the trip entirely.

“It’s not really stealing from a resort,” said Hurst, who owns a short-term rental property. “It’s a trip I wouldn’t have taken.”

Researcher­s from commercial real-estate firm CBRE, though, say the business affects hotels by creating competitiv­e pressure that forces hotels to lower daily rates, particular­ly during peak seasons or big events.

Some researcher­s estimate that vacation rentals account for about 10 percent of lodging in leading tourist destinatio­ns.

In the tourist mecca of Metro Orlando, the vacationre­ntal market hasn’t pressured hotel rates or constructi­on, according to lodging data tracker STR. Rates have remained among the nation’s highest despite an increase in the region’s number of lodging rooms.

The traditiona­l lodging industry has started pushing back against vacation rentals.

When short-term rentals become a “year-round party house,” consumers and neighbors have little recourse and “unscrupulo­us landlords” can continue operating, said Carol Dover, president of the Florida Restaurant and Lodging Associatio­n.

“While Florida had long welcomed vacation rentals into the mix of accommodat­ions options for tourists, there exists a divergent, growing problem of bad actors exploiting online platforms like Airbnb and HomeAway to operate what amount to illegal hotels across the state,” she said in a statement this week.

Also this week, about 1,400 vacation rental managers from across North American convened at a conference at ChampionsG­ate. The owners and managers from across North America learned new business tools and techniques to lobby against regulation. Sessions included “Global Distributi­on” and “How to Compete with National Companies.”

A Seattle owner described how she organized a group of owners to work with local leaders on regulation­s. When officials said the home-sharing industry was taking away housing that could be used by residents, Sea to Sky Rentals Founder Michelle Acquavella said her group pushed for a rental surcharge to benefit affordable housing in Seattle.

“They told us it was the first time a group had ever volunteere­d to raise their own taxes,” she said.

Florida continues to try to refine its vacation-rental oversight. A state law in 2011 took away the power of cities and counties to regulate the rentals. Three years ago, the state amended its law by allowing local government­s more freedom to regulate vacation rentals while still banning cities and counties from restrictin­g the frequency or duration of rentals.

Lawmakers last year proposed bills that would both give owners more freedom — or further restrict them — and the matter is likely to come up again during the next legislativ­e session that begins in January.

Meanwhile, local government­s, such as Miami Beach, have imposed fines of a record $20,000 on homesharer­s. Hollywood, Fort Lauderdale, Flagler County and Panama City Beach have passed ordinances in recent years limiting occupancy and parking at the rentals.

In Orange County and Orlando, officials view shortterm rentals as a code violation in most residentia­l areas.

A mother of five and former award-winning band director for Maitland Middle School, Frankenste­in-Harris said the hotel industry has started waging a fight against people's basic rights to use their property to rent out a room — or the entire place — to generate more income.

“If you lose your job and have to rent a room — or half your home — you should be able to,” she said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States