Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes it's my residence. The bill was created by the Hotel industry (and Councilmember McDuffie). They are trying to close down Airbnb in Washington, DC.
Have you read the bill? You can only host 15 days a year while being away and are fined up to $7,000 if you break the very cumbersome rules (e.g. outrageous "hotel-type) inspections that shouldn't be imposed on individuals).
I have multiple rooms in my home that I rent. Under this bill, I can only rent one (whether I am home or not.
Many of my guests who have come for work or were moving to DC and looking for a "community" (not hotel-like) experience stayed with me between 15-30 days. The new bill prevents these stays.
And my mother is sick and lives out of town. Last year, I would go out of town to visit/help her during stays were folks were repeat visitors and have become friends. One woman who was in town on business stayed with me three times. On the third time, I felt very comfortable being gone from the house and she did too. Also not possible with bill.
The bill is far too restrictive. It's intent is to shut down Airbnb. Like I said, it was created by the Hotel industry (and Councilmember) McDuffie. They don't care about the everyday person looking to Airbnb, just protecting their profits.
Very sad.
You're running a boarding house. Get legit and stop griping. DC actually has a "boarding house" license for the very thing you're doing. You're lucky you haven't already been slapped with a fine. This is why we have zoning...why are you so special that you get flout zoning laws with a commercial business on a residential plat?
How do your neighbors feel about you running a boarding next door to them?
Anonymous wrote:Yes it's my residence. The bill was created by the Hotel industry (and Councilmember McDuffie). They are trying to close down Airbnb in Washington, DC.
Have you read the bill? You can only host 15 days a year while being away and are fined up to $7,000 if you break the very cumbersome rules (e.g. outrageous "hotel-type) inspections that shouldn't be imposed on individuals).
I have multiple rooms in my home that I rent. Under this bill, I can only rent one (whether I am home or not.
Many of my guests who have come for work or were moving to DC and looking for a "community" (not hotel-like) experience stayed with me between 15-30 days. The new bill prevents these stays.
And my mother is sick and lives out of town. Last year, I would go out of town to visit/help her during stays were folks were repeat visitors and have become friends. One woman who was in town on business stayed with me three times. On the third time, I felt very comfortable being gone from the house and she did too. Also not possible with bill.
The bill is far too restrictive. It's intent is to shut down Airbnb. Like I said, it was created by the Hotel industry (and Councilmember) McDuffie. They don't care about the everyday person looking to Airbnb, just protecting their profits.
Very sad.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, of course, I have a business license. I currently rent my basement. I won't be able to under new bill.
Anonymous wrote:
You need to rent through AirBnB to keep your house out of foreclosure? Because the market for traditional renters with regular leases is very good.
Anonymous wrote:DC Councilmember Kenyan McDuffie recently introduced this bill that greatly limits Airbnb hosts in the DC area from renting out their houses.
McDuffie created this bill WITH the hotel industry. I've heard that he's personally benefiting from the deal.
I rent my house and it keeps me out of foreclosure. Such a shame politics is getting in the way of fat cats trying to make a buck!
Anyone else affected by this bad bill?
http://lims.dccouncil.us/Download/37319/B22-0092-Introduction.pdf
Anonymous wrote:What's next? Death to Uber too?
These politicians don't get innovation.
I'm not opposed to regulations, but if you review the proposal (up to $7,000 in fines, hotel-type inspections, etc).
These are homeowners who are opening their houses to others (not like hotel) but often these folks become friends. It's a completely different model.
It's as simple as this... hotels were losing money because of Airbnb. They put lots of money and lobbying behind destroying Airbnb...
Enter Kenyon McDuffie... problem solved!