Chicago Sun-Times

Airbnb? I’ve been there

- ANDY SHAW Andy Shaw is president & CEO of the Better Government Associatio­n. Follow Andy Shaw on Twitter: @ andyshawbg­a Email: ashaw@bettergov.org

I’ ve been following the City of Chicago’s regulatory battle with Airbnb closely in recent months, not from my normal Better Government Associatio­n watchdog perch but because bed and breakfast is personal for the Shaw family.

And it’s top of my mind on a holiday weekend filled with travel and lodging decisions.

Thirty- plus years ago, when I was a TV news reporter and we were raising our daughters in Old Town, my wife bought a bed and breakfast reservatio­n service, and for the next decade she was a broker — connecting Chicago hosts who wanted short- term guests with visitors who found tastefully furnished single-owner homes or apartments preferable to cookie- cutter hotel rooms.

Our garden apartment was a B& B, so we met visitors who, with a few unpleasant exceptions, were courteous, well educated, and interested in discussing politics and culture, so conversati­ons were enjoyable and informativ­e — even for the girls.

In the ’ 90s we went “all in” — converting a Lincoln Park property into a bed and breakfast inn, which we ran for a dozen years.

We had a few zoning and licensing spats with the city — that’s another story — but overall those were good years, as thousands of interestin­g guests from all over the world slept in our guest rooms and wandered into our dining area for breakfast.

It was a lively 24/ 7 home business that expanded our universe and helped pay col- lege tuition bills.

We eventually decided to slow down and decommissi­on the inn, but a few years later an Airbnb- type flap erupted over the bad behavior of a few weekend renters in the small Michigan beach community where we own a home.

A few nights of excessive noise and rude behavior sparked a “no rental” movement that divided friends and neighbors, sparking a mini- war that eventually was resolved with rental limits and hard feelings among the permanent homeowners.

That experience, and a few bad actors who passed through our B& B doors over the years, makes it easy to understand why the recent Chicago battle is so intense and emotional.

Neighborho­od residents don’t want homes and apartments on their block turned into “frat houses” filled with all- night revelers, but rental income is important for struggling property owners.

And unlike our low- tech era, the high- speed internet that makes it super- easy for travelers to digitally book an Airbnb, and hosts to operate one, is also inherently impersonal, which invites problems, including limited screening of hosts and guests and a proliferat­ion of short- term rentals in hot areas.

Those concerns precipitat­ed a flurry of contentiou­s City Hall hearings, protests and threats from Airbnb before the Emanuel administra­tion finally hammered out a complicate­d compromise ordinance that doesn’t satisfy everyone but does address the main concerns.

It taxes rentals, imposes a licensing fee on Airbnb, sets rules for renters, controls density, creates a searchable database of hosts and gives residents a vehicle for confrontin­g problems.

Some aldermen call it a good compromise, others say it’s not enough — that multibilli­on- dollar giant Airbnb got off way too easy — but we won’t be able to vet the claims until we see how the ordinance is implemente­d and enforced over the next year.

I’ll be watching, and I expect to experience, as Yogi Berra put it, “déjà vu all over again,” at least from a distance, as a new generation of visitors and renters reports on many of the same bed and breakfast experience­s — good, bad and ugly — the Shaw family knows very, very well.

 ?? | JOHN MACDOUGALL/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? The City Council has approved new regulation­s for Airbnb and other “home- sharing” services.
| JOHN MACDOUGALL/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES The City Council has approved new regulation­s for Airbnb and other “home- sharing” services.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States