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Airbnb battles ballot measure to restrict home sharing in its home base of San Francisco

By , on October 26, 2015


(Photo from Wikipedia)
(Photo from Wikipedia)

SAN FRANCISCO—Travellers worldwide may love using Airbnb to book vacation stays, but the company that revolutionized home-sharing faces a hostile ballot measure in the city where it was founded.

Proposition F on the Nov. 3 San Francisco ballot would limit short-term rentals to 75 days a year and require hosting companies such as Airbnb to yank listings that violate the limit.

The city would be required to notify neighbours when a person registers to host. The measure would enable pricey lawsuit damages against violators, including the hosting platform. Current city law limits un-hosted rentals to 90 days. There are no limits on hosted rentals.

Airbnb, by far the largest home-share platform in the city and in the world, has donated $8 million and counting to defeat the proposed ordinance. It has saturated television with ads, even trying to sway voters last week with a botched billboard campaign reminding people of the hotel taxes its service collects.

Backers of the measure say the demand for vacation stays is sucking up scarce housing, adding to the city’s unaffordability and destroying what makes San Francisco neighbourhoods unique.

Landlords, they say, have a financial incentive to rent short-term rather than take on long-term tenants, especially in popular neighbourhoods such as the Mission District. Proponents have reported raising $350,000.

Airbnb and other opponents argue the measure will pit neighbour against neighbour and drive out residents who can stay in the city only by sharing their homes short-term. Ads feature warm shots of happy families—supposedly home-sharers—as well as cartoons of an elderly man snooping on his neighbours and calling a “snitch hotline.”

Both sides say they are fighting for the soul of San Francisco, a diverse place that is now a national symbol of income inequality amid sky-high housing costs driven in part by a technology boom.

A one-bedroom without parking rents for over $3,000 a month. In September, a decrepit 1,100-square foot house in which a mummified corpse was found earlier this year sold for more than $1.5 million.

“This is definitely a fight that’s representative of the anxiety that exists here due to an economy that’s been so dynamic,” said Sam Lauter, a San Francisco lobbyist not affiliated with the measure.

The measure has deeply divided the city’s Democratic leadership, with U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein in favour and Mayor Ed Lee and California Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom opposed. Feinstein and Newsom are former mayors.

Cities large and small around the world are trying to balance home-sharing’s popularity with livability for residents.

In New York City, it’s generally unlawful to rent an apartment for less than 30 days unless the apartment’s resident also stays there, but people do anyway. In May, the city council of Santa Monica, California, legalized home sharing—the rental of an extra room or couch—but banned un-hosted rentals for less than 30 days.

San Francisco had prohibited rentals of less than 30 days, but in February approved an ordinance to legalize and regulate the practice. Hosts must register with the city and report how many nights they rent their unit.

The coalition behind the measure, which includes landlord and tenant associations, says the current law is unenforceable. They point to skimpy registration numbers for hosts: About 700 of an estimated 5,500 listings on Airbnb alone.

The ballot measure would require platforms, along with hosts, to file quarterly reports on how many nights a unit is rented. Airbnb and other platforms can be fined up to $1,000 a day if they list illegal units.

Neighbours could sue hosts as well as hosting platforms, collecting up to $1,000 a day in special damages.

Airbnb says the measure would encourage frivolous lawsuits by neighbours motivated by money. Airbnb spokesman Christopher Nulty said the measure itself does nothing to address housing affordability.

On Wednesday, Airbnb rolled out billboard and bus stop ads around San Francisco cheekily suggesting ways the city could use the $12 million it has collected in hotel taxes: “Keep the library open later” and “build more bike lanes.” Annoyed tax-paying citizens took to social media. The backlash was so strong the company was forced to apologize for its “wrong tone.”

Michael Rouppet was evicted from his rent-controlled home in September 2012, after a new owner bought the 1909 building. He learned from former neighbours that his place near the Painted Ladies Victorians had been turned into a short-term rental. In June, he sued the owner, alleging violations of rent laws.

“I would ask how many San Francisco residents have to be evicted to see the wisdom in regulating the industry,” he said. The landlord’s lawyer did not return phone calls and email for comment.

On the flip side is Bruce Bennett, who rents out a room in the 3-bedroom midcentury modern he owns with his husband. The money allows the couple to pay for emergency expenses, and guests are able to enjoy a neighbourhood far from tourist centres.

“I, as a homeowner, should absolutely have that right to do with my property as I see fit,” Bennett said.

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