Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ The fight over short-term rentals continues at The Ogden high-rise.

Planning Commission to weigh new ordinance

- By Jamie Munks

Kerry Gerst loves living perched high above downtown Las Vegas in The Ogden, but being woken up at 6:30 a.m. by a drunken quarrel in a nearby condo that’s flouting city rules by operating as a short-term rental proved less than pleasant.

Gerst and her husband, Chris, in March moved into the downtown high-rise, which has become a flash point in the short-term rental debate in Las Vegas.

“There are bubbles in the city where they don’t allow short-term rentals, and I think this should be one of them. There are many hotels and more on the way,” Gerst said. “There’s a place for them, but when we share walls, it gets to be too much.”

One unit in The Ogden does operate legally as a short-term rental, after the City Council approved that permit last year. Any other owners need a waiver to operate legally because of the city’s 660-foot distance requiremen­t between shortterm rentals, defined as any habitation rented for periods under 31 days.

Critics of the city’s distance requiremen­t say that while they may make sense for measuring in neighborho­ods, it doesn’t work in high-rises. Multiple City Council members have said the rules need a revamp, and a new ordinance is being drafted at City Hall. The Planning Commission is expected to take that up next month.

Councilman Bob Coffin, who represents that part of

downtown Las Vegas, has suggested a new cap that would allow up to 5 percent of the 275 units at The Ogden to legally run short-term rentals.

The covenants, conditions and restrictio­ns for owners at The Ogden don’t have language that deals with short-term rentals, unlike some in other residentia­l developmen­ts in Las Vegas where homeowners associatio­ns ban them. So the owners associatio­n at The Ogden has limited enforcemen­t power on that issue but has given Las Vegas code enforcemen­t officers access to the building.

“Our obligation is first to the people who live there permanentl­y,” Coffin said. “If you can’t control the environmen­t, it may as well be a hotel.”

Uri Vaknin, a partner with KRE Capital, which bought The Ogden in 2013, said an amendment to the covenants, conditions and requiremen­ts for owners at The Ogden is being drafted and aims to reach a compromise between the pro-shortterm-rental owners, opponents and those who are neutral. The amendment would need to be approved by 67 percent of residents.

“My goal is to create something that’s in the best interest of all the residents,” Vaknin said.

Although the city generally allows short-term rentals except in a few specific zones, city planning staffers estimated this summer that more than 1,000 operate citywide without the required licenses and permits.

Residents and city officials say illegal short-term rentals have continued operating at the downtown condo since the City Council passed a new package of regulation­s last year.

Attorney Matthew Sibert represents eight owners at The Ogden who are seeking permits for shortterm rentals and has been part of negotiatio­ns involving the owners associatio­n as well as proponents and opponents of short-term rentals in the building.

“There’s a better way to do it in The Ogden that can be safe and harmonious with neighbors and the community,” Sibert said.

Six applicatio­ns for short-term rental special use permits have been delayed for a council vote until November. Mayor Carolyn Goodman voiced concern at an August council meeting about the delay and about unlicensed rentals continuing to operate.

“If one person is hurt in The Ogden because of these short-term rentals coming in for a weekend or causing problems, or violate any human being in the building, the fault’s right here because we’re not controllin­g that,” Goodman said at the meeting.

Safety concerns about short-term rentals at The Ogden spiked in the aftermath of the Oct. 1 shooting on the Strip, when news broke that shooter Stephen Paddock had rented rooms there overlookin­g the downtown Life is Beautiful festival the weekend before he killed 58 people and injured hundreds at the Route 91 Harvest festival.

There will be heavily increased security in the days leading up to and during the festival, which starts Sept. 21, Vaknin said.

“We have been working with Metro, with Life is Beautiful, with our security company on a security plan,” Vaknin said. “We’ve added security measures in the building.”

Jonas Woolverton moved into the building Oct. 4, the day he found out Paddock had stayed there. He shares some of his neighbors’ concerns about illegal short-term rentals in the building.

“It’s a never-ending cascade of people, and it’s really frustratin­g for those of us who live here,” he said. “I’m not anti-Airbnb. There are situations where it makes sense if the neighbors are cool with it.”

 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-Journal @Erik_Verduzco ?? Kerry Gerst is interviewe­d at her Ogden home Aug. 24. Gerst is opposed to short-term rentals in the building.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-Journal @Erik_Verduzco Kerry Gerst is interviewe­d at her Ogden home Aug. 24. Gerst is opposed to short-term rentals in the building.
 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-Journal @Erik_Verduzco ?? Kerry Gerst enjoys the commanding view of downtown from her residence at The Ogden.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-Journal @Erik_Verduzco Kerry Gerst enjoys the commanding view of downtown from her residence at The Ogden.
 ?? Las Vegas Review-Journal file ?? The Ogden is at the center of the controvers­y over short-term rentals.
Las Vegas Review-Journal file The Ogden is at the center of the controvers­y over short-term rentals.

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