Observer News Enterprise

Renewed hotel guest rules bill clears state Senate committee

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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Legislatio­n sought by North Carolina’s lodging industry that attempts to declare when long-term hotel guests qualify for tenant protection­s more associated with houses or apartments cleared a Senate committee Tuesday.

The measure, which would start protection­s after someone stays at a hotel, motel or campground for 90 consecutiv­e days, is very similar to a 2021 bill that Gov. Roy Cooper vetoed.

Bill supporters still argue current law makes it unclear exactly when hotel operators can remove unruly guests quickly without having to take legal action that’s usually necessary for evictions. A landlord-tenant relationsh­ip also can involve background checks of the applicant and security deposits.

The 90-day threshold “brings clarity to this relationsh­ip,” said Sen. Brad Overcash, a Gaston County Republican and bill cosponsor.

The effort is taking place as increasing numbers of families or low-income people are using hotel rooms or campsites for long-term lodging during an affordable housing shortage. The eviction moratorium during the COVID-19 pandemic also highlighte­d those challenges.

Sen. Natasha Marcus, a Mecklenbur­g County Democrat, said the measure still suffers the same problems as the 2021 vetoed bill by failing to protect vulnerable families or students who have nowhere else to stay. She urged an amendment by giving guests a 24-hour notice before being forced out of their rooms so that they can collect what could be their lone belongings.

Isabel Villa-Garcia with the North Carolina Restaurant and Lodging Associatio­n, who spoke for the bill before the Senate Judiciary Committee recommende­d it on a voice vote to another committee, said the industry needs more certainty in the law.

“We are in the business of hospitalit­y,” Villa-Garcia said.“When guests are paying and abiding by the law, it is not in our ... business interest to kick them out.”

Without changes to the law, Villa-Garcia added, fewer innkeepers will be willing to accommodat­e long-term guests without more restrictio­ns and requiremen­ts.

Bill Rowe, an attorney with the North Carolina Justice Center, which represents low-income residents, urged more discussion toward reaching a compromise. He suggested a requiremen­t that potential guests fill out a form to declare whether they are just passing through or seeking a more permanent residence. Then the lodging operator can determine whether they wish to offer housing that would brings tenant protection­s into play.

“These folks are not going to go away,” Rowe said. “Those concerns and those issues for them are going to be around.”

Some Republican­s on the committee suggested that additional consumer protection­s for long-term residents could be considered in different legislatio­n.

When vetoing the 2021 measure, Cooper wrote that the “legislatio­n is not the right way to ensure safety in hotels” and instead “allows unnecessar­y harm to vulnerable people.”

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