The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Vacation rentals exacerbati­ng state’s housing crisis

After devastatin­g wildfire, issues have been getting worse.

- By Audrey McAvoy

HONOLULU — Amy Chadwick spent years scrimping and saving as a single mother of two to buy a house in the town of Lahaina on the Hawaiian island of Maui. But after a devastatin­g fire leveled Lahaina in August and reduced Chadwick’s home to dust, the cheapest rental she and her now-husband could find for their family and dogs cost $10,000 a month.

Chadwick, a fine-dining server, moved to Florida where she could stretch her homeowners insurance dollars. She’s worried Maui’s exorbitant rental prices, driven in part by vacation rentals that hog a limited housing supply, will hollow out her tight-knit town.

Most people in Lahaina work for hotels, restaurant­s and tour companies, and can’t afford $5,000 to $10,000 a month in rent, she said.

“You’re pushing out an entire community of service industry people, so no one’s going to be able to support the tourism that you’re putting ahead of your community,” Chadwick said by phone from her new home in Satellite Beach, about 70 miles southeast of Orlando. “Nothing good is going to come of it unless they take a serious stance, putting their foot down and really regulating these short-term rentals.”

The Aug. 8 wildfire killed 101 people and destroyed housing for 6,200 families, amplifying Maui’s already acute housing shortage and laying bare the enormous presence of vacation rentals in Lahaina. It reminded lawmakers that short-term rentals are an issue across Hawaii, prompting them to consider bills that would give counties the authority to phase them out.

Gov. Josh Green got so frustrated he blurted out profanity during a recent news conference. “This fire uncovered a clear truth, which is we have too many short-term rentals owned by too many individual­s on the mainland and it is (expletive),” Green said. “And our people deserve housing here.”

Vacation rentals are a popular alternativ­e to hotels for those seeking lower costs and opportunit­ies to sample everyday island life. Supporters say they boost tourism, the state’s biggest employer. But critics say they inflate housing costs, upend neighborho­ods and contribute to the forces pushing locals and Native Hawaiians to leave Hawaii.

This migration has become a major concern in Lahaina. The Council for Native Hawaiian Advancemen­t, a nonprofit, estimates at least 1,500 households — or a quarter of those who lost their homes — have left since the August wildfire.

The blaze burned single-family homes and apartments in and around downtown, which is the core of Lahaina’s residentia­l housing. An analysis by the University of Hawaii Economic Research Organizati­on found a relatively low 7.5% of units there were vacation rentals as of February 2023.

Lahaina neighborho­ods spared by the fire have a much higher ratio of vacation rentals: About half the housing in Napili, about 7 miles north of the burn zone, is short-term rentals.

Napili is where Chadwick thought she found a place to buy when she first went house-hunting in 2016. But a Canadian secured it with a cash offer and turned it into a vacation rental.

Also outside the burn zone are dozens of short-term rental condominiu­m buildings erected decades ago on land zoned for apartments.

In 1992, Maui County explicitly allowed owners in these buildings to rent units for less than 180 days at a time even without shortterm rental permits. Since November, activists have occupied the beach in front of Lahaina’s biggest hotels to push the mayor or governor to use their emergency powers to revoke this exemption.

Money is a powerful incentive for owners to rent to travelers: A 2016 report prepared for the state found a Honolulu vacation rental generates 3.5 times the revenue of a long-term rental.

State Rep. Luke Evslin, a Democrat who is the Housing Committee chair, said Maui and Kauai counties have suffered net losses of residentia­l housing in recent years thanks to a paucity of new constructi­on and the conversion of so many homes to short-term rentals.

“Every alarm bell we have should be ringing when we’re literally going backwards in our goal to provide more housing in Hawaii,” he said.

Evslin was one of 47 House members who co-sponsored one version of legislatio­n that would allow short-term rentals to be phased out.

One objective is to give counties more power after a U.S. judge ruled in 2022 that Honolulu violated state law when it attempted to prohibit rentals for less than 90 days. Evslin said that decision left Hawaii’s counties with limited tools, such as property taxes, to control vacation rentals.

Lawmakers also considered trying to boost Hawaii’s housing supply by forcing counties to allow more houses to be built on individual lots. But they watered down the measure after local officials said they already were exploring the idea.

Short-term rental owners said a phase-out would violate their property rights and take their property without compensati­on, potentiall­y pushing them into foreclosur­e. Some predicted legal challenges.

Alicia Humiston, president of the Rentals by Owner Awareness Associatio­n, said some areas in West Maui were designed for travelers and therefore lack schools and other infrastruc­ture families need.

“This area in West Maui that is sort of like this resort apartment zone — that’s all north of Lahaina — it was never built to be local living,” Humiston said.

One housing advocate argues that just because a community allowed vacation rentals decades ago doesn’t mean it still needs to now.

“We are not living in the 1990s or in the 1970s,” said Sterling Higa, executive director of Housing Hawaii’s Future. Counties “should have the authority to look at existing laws and reform them as necessary to provide for the public good.”

 ?? LINDSEY WASSON/AP 2023 ?? Signs asking people to respect locals and that “Lahaina is not for sale” have cropped up amid an acute housing shortage hitting fire survivors on Maui. Local residents are being squeezed out.
LINDSEY WASSON/AP 2023 Signs asking people to respect locals and that “Lahaina is not for sale” have cropped up amid an acute housing shortage hitting fire survivors on Maui. Local residents are being squeezed out.

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