A study found a third of L.A.'s advertised short-term rental listings have been illegal since the ordinance went into effect
LOS ANGELES (CNS) -- The Los Angeles City Council approved a motion Friday aimed at strengthening enforcement of a city ordinance prohibiting unpermitted and non-compliant Airbnbs and other short-term rental operations.
The motion by Councilwoman Nithya Raman and Councilmen Bob Blumenfield, Mike Bonin and Paul Koretz instructed the Department of City Planning to report back within 90 days on:
"In our city, we cannot afford the consequences of losing any more affordable housing units from a supply that is already in a desperate deficiency,'' Raman said. "Failing to fully and adequately enforce the Home-Sharing Ordinance means we are losing housing, subjecting tenants to displacement pressure, and inviting major nuisance and quality of life issues into our communities. [Friday's] vote is an essential step in our ongoing efforts to stabilize and protect our neighborhoods.''
A study from McGill University prepared for Better Neighbors L.A. found that one-third of the city's advertised short-term rental listings have been illegal since the home sharing ordinance went into effect in 2018.
"We passed short-term rental regulations in L.A. to prevent property owners from converting homes for Angelenos into rogue hotels, but enforcement is so lax that operators and platforms are violating the law and worsening our affordable housing crisis,'' said Mike Bonin, who co-authored the 2018 Home Sharing Ordinance. "We are hemorrhaging valuable rental stock, and it needs to stop.''
The Department of City Planning will also draft a report within 90 days for a plan to create a centralized, digital database or platform to better coordinate tracking of non-compliant properties. The platform would be used for monitoring and enforcement purposes.
The motion also instructed the department to ensure within 90 days that the public be able to view whether any property in the city has a home-sharing license, a home-sharing license renewal or an extended home-sharing
license.
"On top of grappling with out of control parties and violent crimes at short term rentals, we have serious concerns about violations of the Home-Sharing Ordinance such as the illegal conversion of our critical affordable housing stock, hosts engaging in commercial activity, and renting out homes that are not a primary residence,'' Koretz said. "In fact, we see any number of violations of the Home-Sharing Ordinance every day in my district, and we need to take a serious look at the program and the mechanisms and resources required to effectively enforce the ordinance.''
Copyright 2022, City News Service, Inc.