San Francisco Supervisor, Mayor Proposes Tighter Regulations On Short-Term Rentals, Airbnb

San Francisco Supervisor Mark Farrell and Mayor Ed Lee are backing a new set of tighter regulations on short-term rentals and their biggest hosting platforms like Airbnb.

After years of avoiding the subject, the city’s legislative body finally legalized short-term stays last fall and put certain controls on them, including requiring the host to register with the city. But even after these new regulations came into effect in February, only a few hundred out of the thousands of hosts had registered with the city.

So now Farrell is now proposing amendments to these laws. They come at a critical time for the city, which is in the midst of an enormous housing shortage. The city has built fewer than 10,000 housing units over the last five years, while adding about 100,000 employed residents in the same time period. A San Francisco Chronicle study found 5,000 Airbnb listings on a single day of scraping the site last year.

The revisions also come at a critical time for Airbnb, which is facing regulatory battles in desirable urban and coastal areas across the United States. Portland, another early pioneer of Airbnb legislation, also got tougher on enforcement this year after being the model city that cut the very first deal with Airbnb on taxes and regulation in the country.

Farrell said today: “I fully believe that we should support home sharing in San Francisco, but in a way that protects affordable housing in our City, creates a regulatory environment that is simply and enforceable, and removes red-tape for people who are looking to share their residences.”

The proposed changes include:

I’ve embedded the legislation here:

New proposed Airbnb regulations

What does Airbnb think?

Airbnb Letter to London Breed

But there’s another coalition of property owners and affordable housing activists that may put an even more stringent measure on the ballot later this year:

Dale Carson, a spokesperson for the group called ShareBetter, was critical of the new proposal:

This legislation moves us in the wrong direction. It exacerbates the incentives to illegally convert residential units to tourist accommodations. It completely indemnifies Airbnb and other hosting platforms that are aiding and abetting illegal activity. And it denies regular people the opportunity to effectively defend their own homes and neighborhoods.

The Planning Department has made it abundantly clear that the Airbnb legislation passed by the Board of Supervisors last fall is unenforceable. By failing to penalize hosting platforms that violate the law and denying regular San Franciscans their day in court, the amendments proposed today will make the unenforceability problem much worse.

Fortunately, in November, the voters of San Francisco will have the opportunity to establish meaningful, enforceable rules for short-term tourist rentals.

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