San Francisco Chronicle

Airbnb: New York state enacts tough restrictio­ns on many of the short-term rentals.

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ALBANY, N.Y. — New York state enacted one of the nation’s toughest restrictio­ns on Airbnb on Friday with a new law authorizin­g fines of up to $7,500 for many short-term rentals.

The measure signed into law by Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo applies to rentals of fewer than 30 days when the owner or tenant is not present.

Supporters of the measure say many property owners use sites like Airbnb to offer residentia­l apartments as short-term rentals to visitors, hurting existing hotels while taking residentia­l units off the already expensive housing market in New York City.

“Today is a great day for tenants, seniors, and anyone who values the safe and quiet enjoyment of their homes and neighborho­ods,” said Manhattan Democratic Sen. Liz

Krueger. “For too long companies like Airbnb have encouraged illegal activity that takes housing off the market and makes our affordabil­ity crisis worse.”

Airbnb said it would immediatel­y file a lawsuit challengin­g the law.

“In typical fashion, Albany backroom dealing rewarded a special interest — the pricegougi­ng hotel industry — and ignored the voices of tens of thousands of New Yorkers,” said Josh Meltzer, Airbnb’s head of public policy in New York.

Enforcemen­t of the new laws will be a key challenge. Thousands of short-term apartment rentals are listed for New York City despite a 2010 law that prohibits rentals of fewer than 30 days when the owner or tenant is not present.

The new law won’t apply to rentals in singlefami­ly homes, row houses or apartment spare rooms if the resident is present.

The complicate­d rules mean many New Yorkers may not know whether they can legally rent out their homes — and Airbnb says it does not have the ability to remove listings that violate the 2010 law.

Supporters say the fines are meant to go after commercial operators who rent large numbers of vacant units in apartment buildings or those who exploit tourists by renting out unsafe, unregulate­d lodgings.

Airbnb mounted a last-minute campaign to kill the measure and this week proposed alternativ­e regulation­s that the company argued would address concerns about short-term rentals without onerous fines.

Most people who list a rental on Airbnb are looking to make a little money while they’re out of town, according to Chris Lehane, head of global policy for Airbnb, which is from San Francisco. The company says the 46,000 Airbnb hosts in New York City have generated more than $2 billion in economic activity.

“It’s baffling to us in this time of economic inequality that folks would be looking to impose fines of as much as $7,500 on a middleclas­s person looking to use the home that they live in to help make ends meet,” Lehane said before the bill was signed.

A spokesman for Cuomo said the administra­tion gave the bill careful considerat­ion.

“Ultimately, these activities are already expressly prohibited by law,” said spokesman Rich Azzopardi.

An investigat­ion of Airbnb rentals from 2010 to 2014 by the state attorney general’s office found that 72 percent of the units in New York City were illegal, with commercial operators constituti­ng 6 percent of the hosts and supplying 36 percent of the rentals.

As of August, Airbnb had 45,000 city listings and 13,000 others across the state.

 ?? Cole Wilson / New York Times ?? Chris Lehane, global policy chief for Airbnb, says most rent their place when out of town.
Cole Wilson / New York Times Chris Lehane, global policy chief for Airbnb, says most rent their place when out of town.

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