South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Homeowners would be hurt by bills deregulati­ng rentals

- By Mark Anderson

Florida is home to the largest number of residents living in a community associatio­n.

Some 10 million homeowners live in neighborho­ods with community associatio­ns and are protected by time-honored, deed restrictio­ns adopted by a majority and, in some cases, a super majority vote of those who pay the bills and will be most impacted by them — homeowners.

These homeowners voluntaril­y pay over $2 billion every year to protect their quality of life, home values, and property rights through enforcemen­t and compliance through deed restrictio­ns.

Now, renting out one’s home or a bedroom on a short-term basis is nothing new. However, our laws have not kept up. In fact, Florida actually went the other way to benefit those who exploit home-sharing as for-profit, commercial businesses under the false pretense of “property rights”.

And guess where those unregulate­d, commercial businesses with no offices are headquarte­red? Right inside Florida’s neighborho­ods.

These unregulate­d businesses then went even further and convinced our Legislatur­e to remove what little oversight that existed, with some exceptions for cities who had existing rules, leaving our neighborho­ods exposed as a last line of defense against unregulate­d proliferat­ion of these commercial businesses. Our neighborho­ods, in many cases, changed almost overnight. A buyer’s market is a good thing, but in neighborho­ods, the opposite happened.

Homes that were sold were snatched up by unidentifi­ed operators who did not occupy the homes they purchased. Homes were then rented out by the night with no protection­s for those living next door, no remedies for guests if something went wrong and no ability for our neighborho­ods to know who lived next door, who these operators were or if they were licensed to do business at all.

While some Associatio­ns already had protection­s in place, many did not.

Those which did not amended their covenants to halt further proliferat­ion of these commercial businesses inside of their neighborho­ods and those efforts continue to this day.

In the 2018 legislativ­e session, some of these commercial operators tried to remove any local government or neighborho­od oversight. The Florida Legislatur­e thankfully sided with homeowners and rejected this idea.

However, this year, some lawmakers are backing bills to remove the last vestiges of the few remaining local rules in place to protect the public. These bills unequivoca­lly state that constituti­onal “property rights” apply to anyone who chooses to rent their home, or multiple homes or hundreds of homes by the night, with no regard for the rules they agreed to comply with.

They say that because vacation rentals are “residentia­l in nature” they therefore are permitted to exist in our neighborho­ods, again, with no acknowledg­ment of the rights of millions of our fellow Floridians who contractua­lly agreed to play by the rules.

At best, these bills, HB 987 and SB

824, create confusion and conflict with adopted or yet to be adopted protection­s for our neighborho­ods, forcing our Associatio­ns to increase costs by hiring pricey lawyers to defend the rights of their homeowners.

At worst, these bills violate deed restrictio­ns for an entire neighborho­od by allowing anyone who owns a home — or hundreds of homes they don’t live in — to disregard the rules, which they, as a homeowner, legally agreed to comply with.

This is wrong for our homeowners, our economy, and our state.

Mark Anderson is the Executive Director of the Chief Executive Officers of Management Companies (CEOMC), representi­ng management of more than 14,000 homeowners associatio­ns, more than 18,000 managers, and more than six million homeowners.

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