Vancouver Sun

Seventeen communitie­s opt into new restrictio­ns

- CHERYL CHAN chchan@postmedia.com x.com/cherylchan

With less than two weeks before B.C.'s short-term rental restrictio­ns take effect, visitors staying at an Airbnb, Vrbo or other short-term rental homes are told to check with their hosts to make sure they are not staying in illegal accommodat­ions.

Guests should ask hosts if they are compliant with the new rules, said B.C.'s housing minister, even as he reassured guests they won't be on the hook.

“The responsibi­lity to comply with the rules fall with the hosts and the short-term rental platforms,” Ravi Kahlon said at a news conference with Premier David Eby in Langley on Thursday. “We encourage people to continue to explore beautiful British Columbia, and stay in legal short-term rental accommodat­ions.”

The new regulation­s set to take effect on May 1 would restrict short-term rentals to principal residences and either a secondary suite or a laneway home/garden suite on the property.

They apply to more than 60 B.C. communitie­s with population­s of more than 10,000 people, as well as 17 smaller communitie­s, including Bowen Island, Tofino, Osoyoos, Pemberton, and Gabriola Island, which have decided to opt in. For these communitie­s, the rules will take effect on Nov. 1.

The new legislatio­n carries penalties of $500 to $5,000 a day per infraction for hosts and reach as high as $10,000 a day for platforms.

Eby said the province's principal residence requiremen­t is meant to crack down on speculator­s while allowing homeowners to rent out spaces in their principal residences if they choose to do so.

He acknowledg­ed the restrictio­ns could put some property owners' investment and retirement plans into disarray, but made no apologies, saying people with money to invest should put their money elsewhere.

“Do not compete with individual­s and families who are looking for a place to live with your investment dollars,” Eby said, adding the government will “tilt the deck every single time toward that family.”

The government has set up a provincial enforcemen­t unit, currently staffed by four people, to conduct investigat­ions into alleged non-compliant units.

The enforcemen­t will be largely done digitally using a short-term rental data portal that will help local government­s monitor and enforce regulation­s.

Municipali­ties with their own short-term rental restrictio­ns can upload non-compliant properties to the portal, said Kahlon. Platforms will have five days to verify whether the units are on their sites. Local government­s without short-term rental licensing can report properties they believe are not compliant.

The platforms will be required to remove non-compliant listings at the request of local or the provincial government­s and provide the province with a monthly update of short-term listings on their sites, said Kahlon.

Companies such as Expedia and Booking.com are working to get ready for the new rules, and he's hopeful other platforms will follow suit by May 1.

Airbnb said it has been in discussion­s with the provincial government for months and plans to comply with the new rules, but predicts they will harm the province's tourism sector by taking extra income away from residents and limiting accommodat­ion options for people, while doing little to improve the housing crunch for residents.

“They're doing this because they say there's going to be an impact on housing, that this will free up more housing for people,” said Nathan Rotman, Airbnb's policy lead in Canada. “That is just not true.”

Despite several years of Airbnb restrictio­ns in Vancouver, for example, rents have gone up while vacancies stayed low, he said.

Kahlon said the pending rules are already having a positive impact on housing availabili­ty with short-term rentals being converted to long-term use or being put up for sale.

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