Toronto Star

Some Toronto condos ban Airbnbs amid virus crisis

Short-term rentals ‘present undue risk,’ residents told

- TESS KALINOWSKI REAL ESTATE REPORTER

After years of struggling or failing to stop their buildings from being used as de facto hotels for short-term rental operators, some Toronto condos are finally banning Airbnbs because of concerns about the spread of COVID-19. The move comes at a time when most people are isolating in their homes to prevent the spread of the virus while Airbnb and other short-term rental platforms are facing unpreceden­ted numbers of booking cancellati­ons amid global travel bans.

ICE condos at York Street and Lake Shore Boulevard West and Maple Leaf Square condos on Bremner Boulevard. have informed residents that short-term stays are prohibited effective Thursday.

The management of ICE condos said it wouldn’t interfere with anyone currently occupying the building. But all imminent bookings of less than 28 days had to be cancelled and devices being used to access the building by unauthoriz­ed residents would be deactivate­d.

Short-term rentals “present an undue risk of danger to residents and to the short-term rental tenants themselves,” said a notice at Maple Leaf Square.

The move is overdue but welcome, said Thorben Wieditz of Fairbnb, a coalition of academics, community and tenant groups that backed the city’s short-term rental bylaws at a provincial tribunal last fall.

There are residents in buildings around the city who “are up in arms” because condo boards and property managers are suggesting short-term rentals cease but aren’t mandating it,” he said.

Wieditz said residents are telling him,

“There are laws on the books, there is a global pandemic, you must cease operations immediatel­y.”

On Tuesday, Fairbnb delivered a draft statement of claim to the property manager and condo board of the ICE

buildings threatenin­g a $3-million class-action lawsuit because the building wasn’t complying with city zoning bylaws that prohibit short-term rentals in homes that are not the owner’s principal residence.

“To us it seems completely reasonable to take this step to inform condo corporatio­ns and their management companies that there are laws on the books and they, at a minimum, must recognize that in their communicat­ions to everyone in the building — to say they are illegal and they will take whatever steps necessary to ensure they are not operating,” Wieditz said.

The claim was not registered in court because of COVID-19 closures and it remains unclear if the legal action will go ahead given that ICE has banned short-term rentals, said Fairbnb lawyer Eric Gillespie.

“ICE was the only condominiu­m named (in the suit) but there are dozens of condo corporatio­ns that may be in a similar situation.

“If the response from other condos is similar, that obviously is a huge step in a very good direction, but that’s an unknown right now. We don’t know if the claim is going to proceed with other condominiu­m corporatio­ns,” he said.

There is a public health risk in tourist accommodat­ion, said York University environmen­tal studies professor Roger Keil, who co-edited a book about the SARS epidemic called “Networked Disease.”

In 2003, the Hotel Metropole in Hong Kong was the site of a “super spread” event that sent

SARS to points across the globe by travellers.

“Hotels are regulated spaces and they are cleaned by profession­al staff and they are under tight control in terms of public health. We know this is not necessaril­y the case in the (shortterm rental) industry,” he said.

“If you now have thousands of people staying in fairly unregulate­d spaces shared with regular residents I cannot see how this cannot be a public health concern at the present moment,” Keil said.

Like SARS, COVID-19 is a coronaviru­s and respirator­y disease.

“Any kind of virus can come at us quickly and spread very fast depending on how transmissi­on works,” he said.

“This is the world in which we now live and this is a world of high mobility, and Airbnb plays a major role in facilitati­ng this mobility,” Keil said.

The Local Planning Appeal Tribunal last fall upheld the rules approved by the city that were originally to have taken effect nearly two years ago but were delayed by appeals by short-term rental landlords.

The bylaw is now in effect, a city spokeswoma­n said Wednesday.

Despite the global travel bans and many Airbnb cancellati­ons from tourists, some are still operating, Wieditz said. Some have been advertised as isolation units, he said.

Property management companies need to follow the law and instruct people properly. They cannot suggest that landlords voluntaril­y stop the rentals, he said.

A spokespers­on for ICE’s property manager, Duka Property Management, said the condo board there had decided to take action before receiving notice of the draft legal claim Tuesday.

Airbnb Canada’s public policy manager, Alex Dagg, said the company recognizes that businesses, corporatio­ns and individual­s are all going to react differentl­y to the pandemic situation.

“There are a lot of people — from medical staff, diplomats that are returning from overseas, internatio­nal students — who have nowhere to go after their residences have closed. They have been looking for places to stay and our hosts have been able to provide that,” Dagg said.

“We often are hearing from medical profession­als who are looking for places to stay,” she said.

 ?? ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE TORONTO STAR ?? Thorben Wieditz of Fairbnb said residents are telling him, “There are laws on the books, there is a global pandemic, you must cease operations immediatel­y.”
ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE TORONTO STAR Thorben Wieditz of Fairbnb said residents are telling him, “There are laws on the books, there is a global pandemic, you must cease operations immediatel­y.”

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