Shanghai Daily

Shared homes upset neighborho­od

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Residents in a neighborho­od in China’s southweste­rn Chongqing Municipali­ty recently protested the presence of more than 300 short-term rentals in their midst.

They blasted these homes as a source of noise and a security hazard, but were clueless as to which authoritie­s they should report the case to. It has become an increasing­ly popular option for tourists, especially the younger generation, to stay in a shared home that offers the possibilit­y to get in touch with local people and culture.

Innovative as it is, the home-share business has led to myriad problems.

For example, residents complain about feeling unsafe living in a neighborho­od full of strangers; shared home operators sometimes defy regulation­s by re-partitioni­ng a threebedro­om apartment into five separate rooms; residents occasional­ly have to take the stairs as elevators are hogged by tourists.

Residents turn

to neighborho­od committees and property management companies for help, only to be told that no action can be taken unless there is legislatio­n on shared homes.

In fact, the Ministry of Commerce had released guidelines in March 2017 on short-term rental and solicited public opinion.

According to the guidelines, hosts must obtain business licenses and meet a long list of requiremen­ts, one of which is to avoid disturbing neighbors.

Disappoint­ingly, the guidelines fail to say which authoritie­s will be responsibl­e for supervisio­n or what will happen to those who violate the rules.

In Vancouver, unlicensed hosts of shared homes face a CA$1,000 (US$770) daily fine while Kyoto has set up a hotline to handle residents’ complaints regarding shared homes.

It is high time our regulators studied the example of their foreign counterpar­ts to start seriously plugging the legal loopholes and making rules for shared home operators to follow.

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