Short-term rentals draw Yorba Linda attention
An
interesting report on regulating short-term rentals with a focus on
zoning and tax issues, among other topics, was presented to Yorba
Linda City Council members earlier this month.
Currently,
the city has 89 short-term rentals, estimated to be 36 for the entire
house and 53 for single bedrooms or guest quarters. Just three have
secured business licenses and none to date have paid the city's
transient occupancy tax, according to the report.
Three
rentals have been described as disruptive to their neighborhoods,
noted the report from Finance Director Scott Catlett and Community
Development Director David Brantley.
“Complaints...include
an increase in the number of unfamiliar individuals in the
neighborhood, additional traffic, a lack of available parking, loud
music playing into the night and the hosting of parties and other
types of special events that draw a large audience,” the report
stated.
Single
bedrooms or guest quarters rent for an average $100 per night, while
some whole-house rentals go for more than $1,000 per night, according
to data from Host Compliance, a San Francisco-based firm the city
has hired to assist with managing the rentals.
The
company will identify short-term rentals and owners doing business in
the city, monitor the existing rentals for compliance, provide
guidance to new or illegal rentals and check for rental activity to
flag suspected properties for further analysis by the city.
Cost is
$65 per property per year, which, based on 89 rentals would be
$5,785, not including a 10 percent discount for a three-year
contract, plus a $5,000 fee for changes allowing owners to pay
occupancy taxes through the city's existing business license Web
portal.
The city
estimates the 10 percent transient occupancy tax, which is remitted
quarterly, will total $17,600 and business license taxes $2,200
yearly, based on the 89 identified rentals.
A
six-month amnesty period with no back taxes or license fees has been
authorized as a one-time option that expires if an operator fails to
respond “in a timely fashion” to an initial contact.
City
officials believe a specific short-term rental ordinance is not
needed at this time, since the city's zoning and noise ordinances and
debt collection practices can handle issues. And court orders can
require operators to cease doing business if they don't comply with
city ordinances.
For
example, city zoning rules don't allow homes to be used as “event
facilities,” and only uses that complement “residential living”
are permitted in the city's eight residential zones.
A noise
ordinance has specific allowable decibel levels during day and
evening hours, with violations subject to citation by Sheriff's
deputies as a “disturbance of the peace.”
A “good
neighbor” brochure with noise, parking, pet, trash and occupancy
rules will be distributed to operators. The council will review
short-term rental issues in six months.
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