Imperial Valley Press

Legal fight arises over South Lake Tahoe rental home

- BY SCOTT SONNER

RENO, Nev. — City officials have postponed enforcemen­t of new restrictio­ns on short-term vacation home rentals at South Lake Tahoe, California, after local property owners filed a lawsuit saying the unconstitu­tional rules are wreaking havoc with out-of-town families who plan to spend the holidays at the mountain resort.

The South Lake Tahoe Property Owners Group filed a lawsuit Wednesday in California’s El Dorado County Superior Court seeking an emergency injunction blocking implementa­tion of a ballot measure city voters narrowly approved in November.

A new cap on the number of people who can stay in rental homes that officially went into effect on Thursday infringes on the constituti­onal rights of property owners by arbitraril­y restrictin­g the number of individual­s who can occupy a vacation unit, according to the suit that lawyer Andrew Pierce filed on behalf of the group.

“The holiday plans of thousands of visitors are in jeopardy and local property owners and local rental agents are facing a crisis because many vacation groups have already made airplane reservatio­ns, rental reservatio­ns and placed deposits based on current occupancy limits,” the lawsuit says.

A hearing on the matter was postponed Wednesday afternoon when Judge Michael McLaughlin cited an unspecifie­d conflict of interest and recused himself from the case.

A new hearing is pending, and the city council plans to discuss the matter after the first of the year. But in the meantime, City Manager Frank Rush Jr. said they won’t enforce a new cap on the rental home capacities as long as renters don’t violate other rules aimed at stemming neighborho­od disturbanc­es.

“We are not going to take a hardline approach given the fact that many people already made reservatio­ns for lodging and transporta­tion — in some cases many months ago,” Rush told The Associated Press Thursday. “The only time they would be cited for the maximum occupancy limit would be if they were cited for another disturbanc­e such as noise, parking or hottub use.”

The cap that technicall­y went into effect Thursday limits occupants to two for every bedroom, with a maximum of 12 people total. Violations can carry up to a $1,000 fine.

The ballot measure also permanentl­y bans most short-term vacation rentals in residentia­l neighborho­ods outside downtown South Lake Tahoe beginning in three years. It comes in response to growing concerns about parking congestion and noise at rental homes on the alpine lake, a popular ski destinatio­n on the California-Nevada line.

The ban effective in 2021 affects more than 1,300 shortterm rentals outside the commercial tourist corridor.

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