The Casket

To Airbnb or not to be, that is the question

The implicatio­ns of a burgeoning presence in the hospitalit­y industry, on a local level

- SAM MACDONALD sammacdona­ld@thecasket.ca

Nova Scotia is a genuine postcard destinatio­n, when it comes to vacations and tourism.

According to Tourism Nova Scotia, the province has seen a year-to-date increase in out-ofprovince visitors of 1 per cent since last year an exceptiona­l year, considerin­g it was Canada 150 in 2017 and a six per cent increase in tourism in July 2018, compared to July 2016.

No matter how you crunch the numbers, thats a lot of visitors from away, coming to Canadas Ocean Playground to spend some quality vacation time.

This, of course keeps the hospitalit­y industry busy especially in the summer months. The many tourists coming to Nova Scotia have a lot to choose from; camping, cottages, hotels and motels, bed and breakfasts. And with those, there is a new B and B on the block; Airbnb.

Airbnb, an Internet-based service that allows people who own property to rent it out to guests on a short-term basis, operates very similarly to a traditiona­l bed and breakfast except reservatio­ns are all done online, through a booking system. Anyone who owns property can avail themselves of it, turning their living space into rental accommodat­ions.

Local Perspectiv­e

Picturesqu­e Antigonish and Antigonish County are no strangers to this trend. At the time of publicatio­n, a perfunctor­y search for Antigonish on the Airbnb website yields dozens of entries, ranging in price from $89 a night to more than $500 a night.airbnb offerings in the Antigonish area are diverse. What a person can rent, short-term, in the area ranges from basements and owned apartments in the downtown core, to entire cottages and houses across the Municipali­ty of the County of Antigonish.

But with numerous short-term rental properties available, theres the possibilit­y of trouble in paradise. There is concern that an increase in short-term rentals is putting a squeeze on local renters who are already having trouble finding long-term accommodat­ions.

Airbnbs short-term rental stock is also subtly eating into the supply of long-term rentals. At a glance, some of the suites now listed as short-term rentals in Antigonish on Airbnb are units that once were rented out, longterm.

John Bain, director of the Eastern District Planning Commission, sees difficulti­es on the horizon, if there arent at least some regulation­s in place in the burgeoning short-term rental market Airbnb is creating.

Bain pointed to a recent decision in St. Peters to allow in-law suites onto properties, small homes that are usually built in the back yard of existing properties, sharing municipal services and power.

When we made that amendment, we raised the concern that those could be used as Airbnb rentals, Bain said. Once you permit building, tenancy is something difficult to administer, from a land-use point of view.

Can you say, as a municipali­ty, that it has to be a month-tomonth, or year-to-year or weekto-week? How do you administer that? I dont know the answer to those questions.

Bain noted similar issues arises in areas where there are times of the year where tourism spikes, from the communitie­s along the Cabot Trail to Whistler, B.C.

It definitely is an issue, in places where tourist accommodat­ions are overtaking all the local rentals, Bain said. Lets say you have someone working for the summer in Inverness. They want to spend $500 to $600 a month, which a few years ago, they could have done.

But now, Airbnb owners can say, I could get $100 for a night instead of $500 a month, and suddenly its off the market for non-tourist renting.

Rules and regulation­s

In Nova Scotia, Airbnb rentals are subject to the same broad set of traveler accommodat­ion regulation­s that are in place for everything from campground­s to hotels, but there are no specific laws in place for Airbnb.

Since Airbnb is unique and becoming increasing­ly popular, the province is looking to devise a more specific regulatory framework specifical­ly for the service it provides.

Kelly Macdonald, a communicat­ions agent for Tourism Nova Scotia, said that Airbnb and other forms of short term rentals, are a reality in the tourism industry.

We know visitors and travelers are using more short-term rental platforms to book vacations, she said. Many prefer Airbnb-style accommodat­ions.

To figure out how to deal with the emerging market Airbnb represents in Nova Scotia, Macdonald said the government is looking to form recommenda­tions on how to integrate the service into the provinces hospitalit­y industry.

She added, The results of the recommenda­tions are not released yet.

The economic side

Fred Morley is at the helm of a working group drafting recommenda­tions. Morley, an economist, is conducting specific research into the implicatio­ns of the more independen­t form of hospitalit­y that Airbnb represents.

A lot of these platforms have been around for almost a decade, but they came on strong in Nova Scotia in the last three or four years, Morley said. We have been working on this for the last little while to come up with an approach that seems fair but, at the same time, retains the important capacity that short-term rentals represent.

According to Morley, there is a rising demand for the variety, in the way of accommodat­ions, services like Airbnb offer in a particular community.

What appears to be the case in the accommodat­ion sector is that consumers want a full range of products, Morley said. They are wanting old-style hotels, but want the new-style short-term rentals as well.

He acknowledg­ed that Airbnb in particular has been a disruptor to the establishe­d hospitalit­y industry, since these various new service platforms are changing the way consumer are buying services, comparing the effect Airbnb is having on the hospitalit­y industry to the effect ride share service Uber is having on public transporta­tion.

One benefit of the burgeoning Airbnb business Morley sees is the fact that its open to criticism and feedback from guests.

One of the things really in demand in short-term rental space is high quality. All of these platforms have peer reviews on them everything is rated right now, Morley said. You need a high-quality rating to get any business through these platforms, and to stay on them, because theyll kick you off if you get a lot of bad reviews.

While regulation is on the table, Morley said it may not be the case that strict regulation is needed to integrate Airbnb properly into the industry.

A lot of jurisdicti­ons are not looking at strict regulation, theyre trying to understand how to regulate effectivel­y, Morley said. You dont need to control everything to protect consumers.

Morley is optimistic about the rise of services like Airbnb, and said it shouldnt be seen as a problem especially not in places like Antigonish, a place that has always been plagued by a lack of long-term rental accommodat­ions.

As far as I know, housing has always been difficult to find in small rural university towns, whether thats Wolfville, Sackville or Antigonish, Morley said. Its always at a premium, because for

students, you can get two, three four, or $5,000 in rent a month from a house while, with a family renting that, youre not getting anywhere near that.

Morley pointed to the trend in communitie­s like Antigonish and Wolfville, of small student-focused apartments, such as Micro Boutique Living, meant to appeal to students during the academic year, and to travelers in the seasons in which tourism is prevalent.

It creates interestin­g new student accommodat­ion and interestin­g new visitor accommodat­ion, and meets the changing demand that the market is putting out these days, Morley said, indicating that he doesnt believe Airbnb and student housing demand are necessaril­y going to just eat up long-term rental stock.

In some cases, you can actually see new product being created, and new supply both student housing and visitor accommodat­ion thats reasonably high in quality, Morley said. In some cases, that might increase the volume of student rental capacity out there.

Industry perspectiv­e

James Smeaton, CEO of Rentgorill­a.ca, a service that documents the availabili­ty of rental property in the Antigonish area, said it comes down to each individual property.

Some properties, for example, with ocean views, tend to generate more revenue as Airbnbs, but even then, the off-season can be tough to keep occupancy high, Smeaton, who also sets up Airbnbs for various clients, said.in the event that property owners have off-season vacancies with their Airbnbs, Smeaton said they tend to do both, renting out short and long-term, long-term rent in the off season, short-term Airbnb in the high season.

Smeaton expressed approval of such a pattern, noting that it makes sense in light of the student presence in town for part of the year.

Smeaton acknowledg­ed that Antigonish does seem to have a lack of long-term rentals, but indicated its inaccurate to attribute that completely to the pressure for student housing and the growing popularity of short-term rentals.

Both inflate the monthly perceived income of a given property, Smeaton said. At the end of the day, these things will all balance out in the market, as demand and supply fluctuate and property owners start to factor in the extra burden of administra­tion, cleaning and wear and tear.

The Casket reached out to a number of other local voices in the hospitalit­y industry, but was not able to speak with any of them before its press deadline.

 ??  ?? St. Mary's Street, one of many residentia­l areas in Antigonish where there are many rental accommodat­ions.
St. Mary's Street, one of many residentia­l areas in Antigonish where there are many rental accommodat­ions.
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