Otago Daily Times

Accommodat­ion providers want help

OAMARU

- ASHLEY SMYTH

COMMERCIAL accommodat­ion providers are calling on the Waitaki District Council to take decisive and bold action on Airbnbs before there are no commercial operators left in Oamaru.

Poshtel owner Phillip McNicholl said the council needed to understand how dire the situation was for commercial operators in Oamaru — and something needed to happen now.

‘‘There’s a lot of media about what’s going on in Queenstown, but the same things are happening in Oamaru. There’s not that many commercial operators, so it’s not as visual. But they’ll all be in trouble.’’

There are about 135 Airbnb properties running in Oamaru, but before Covid19 there had been more than 300.

‘‘Each one of those has got two or three bedrooms. That’s equivalent of, you know, 20 Poshtels being built in that period of three years,’’ Mr McNicholl said.

‘‘It’s quite a disproport­ionate number for the size of the town.’’

Mr McNicholl said initially he was OK with Airbnb hitting Oamaru because it was bringing money into the local economy.

But since the Covid19 lockdown, commercial accommodat­ion providers were struggling.

‘‘I would say occupancy levels are. . . sub40%, I would think. Some of them would be a lot less.’’

Oamaru Licensing Trust general manager Cathy Maaka said one of the biggest concerns was building safety.

‘‘Airbnb property owners have none of these strict compliance criteria and fall under the radar in terms of safety and compliance,’’ she said.

Commercial operators, such as the trustrun Brydone Hotel and Northstar Motels, had compliance costs which included monthly fire service inspection­s, sixmonthly trial evacuation­s, and commercial tariffs for water, insurance and council rates.

‘‘The difference means that

Airbnb operators can charge less because they have less overheads to service.’’

If commercial accommodat­ion providers closed their businesses because they could not sustain financial losses, when the borders opened up again and there were tourists who wanted commercial accommodat­ion, it would not be available, Ms Maaka said.

Ms Maaka said the Airbnb ‘‘phenomenon’’ was also taking business away from other tourism providers.

Airbnb guests paid less for their accommodat­ion and often cooked their own meals, so the benefit to the town was for the house owner and supermarke­t, but very little for others in the hospitalit­y industry.

She said measures needed to be taken to even the playing field, and priority should be given to safety.

Building code requiremen­ts should be implemente­d for properties that slept more than five; Airbnb operators should be charged commercial council rates and water rates; and some sort of certificat­ion or registrati­on process was needed that allowed tracking and enforcemen­t of requiremen­ts.

‘‘If you are going to act like a business, be prepared to be treated like a business.’’

Waitaki District Council heritage and planning manager Hamish Barrell said it was an issue for the district plan review.

‘‘We’re currently looking to develop a draft on it, and it will have to have different chapters on residentia­l and commercial based on the zone boundaries. And within those, it will have controls on visitor accommodat­ion.

‘‘The question I can’t answer, is what those provisions contain, and how they relate to Airbnb.’’

The district plan would be available for public consumptio­n about April, and Mr Barrell said then would be a good time for anyone who was concerned about Airbnb to look at how the rules might apply in their particular context.

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 ?? PHOTO: REBECCA RYAN ?? Oamaru’s commercial accommodat­ion providers could be in trouble if something is not done to counter the effect of Airbnbs on the industry, local operators say.
PHOTO: REBECCA RYAN Oamaru’s commercial accommodat­ion providers could be in trouble if something is not done to counter the effect of Airbnbs on the industry, local operators say.

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