The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Ireland unveils Airbnb curbs to ease housing crunch

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DUBLIN: Ireland announced plans to reign in popular shortterm rental services such as Airbnb in a bid to address a historic housing shortage.

The regulation­s – slated to take effect in June 2019 – would enforce a ‘one host, one home’ rule in areas of high housing demand.

The government says the changes will allow Airbnb, whose European headquarte­rs are in Dublin, “to continue as it was originally meant to be – a homeowner hosting people in their own home for short periods of time.” Airbnb called the regulation­s misguided.

“Home sharing didn’t cause Ireland’s historic housing concerns, and many will be dishearten­ed to hear a false promise that these proposals are the solution,” an Airbnb statement said.

“Community hospitalit­y and holiday rentals are the backbone of many local economies, and cutting that lifeline will hit many communitie­s hard.”

The regulation­s would ban landlords from using a second property as a short-term letting operation, unless they already are, and prevent a person from renting out their primary residence for more than 90 days a year.

The housing ministry said “profession­al landlords (were) withdrawin­g houses and apartments that would normally be rented on a long-term basis to instead rent them out as shortterm lets.”

“This is an unregulate­d activity, it is not home-sharing as it is typically understood.”

Eurostat, the EU data agency, said average monthly rent for a one bedroom flat in Dublin was 1,550 euros (US$1,770) last year, about the same as in economical­ly vibrant Singapore.

Officials say the new-build housing market in Ireland is struggling to regain momentum after a recession killed off the ‘Celtic Tiger’ economic boom a decade ago.

The housing crisis has been the focus of a number of high-profile occupation­s and protests, centred mainly in Dublin. Demonstrat­ors from a group called Take Back the City occupied Airbnb’s Dublin offices on Oct 13, saying the US firm had ‘rapidly colonised vast amounts of our city’. — AFP

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