STR
To be sure, short term (housing)
rentals (STRs) are an issue; proponents on both sides debate and argue, with
logic and intelligence, for and against as well as those who complain: “I have more important things to think
about—leave me in peace”
STR is a
way for people to make a little extra money while providing a service to
visitors that want an opportunity to experience our city the way that a local
does.
Or; STR is a business that takes rental
space out of commerce while paying no taxes on the income that is made and
essentially depriving legitimate hospitality businesses from making an honest
living.
Or----- During special events, hotels
and B&Bs charge exorbitant amounts of money, do not offer home-like
amenities and generally are not as personable as a resident providing the same
if not better living conditions for less money.
But:
there are people that rent housing, buy property or own spaces that cater only
to STR visitors who take away the flavor of our city by turning neighborhoods
into stretches of STRs.
And---
then there’s the “I don’t give a flip
about your local politics and concerns; me and my buddies (bachelorette group,
family reunion, romantic getaway) just want to kick back, relax and have a good
time. Should I care about legal or illegal? The guy’s renting the space, we
want space, resolve your differences and stop making me the bad guy! I’m paying
good money to be here! Deal with it!”
` Truth be told, all this centers, rightly (or wrongly) around an organization named AIRBNB. Truth be told: there are at least a dozen other companies and communications that foster STRs (20,000+ reservations over Jazz Fest). Is it good for the economy? Yes and no. Visitors that experience’ life as a local’ still spend money and on a shop-small level they help independent businesspeople; they go to local restaurants and grocery stores, they frequent off the beaten path clubs and watering holes, they hang in our parks and on our porches. In short, they get the low down on the slowdown of our way of life from locals and avoid ‘tourist traps’. However, our service industry (28,000+) suffers when the ‘captive audience’ isn’t spending money on parking, room service, cookie cutter eating places and attractions aimed at “once in a blue moon” visitor.
` Truth be told, all this centers, rightly (or wrongly) around an organization named AIRBNB. Truth be told: there are at least a dozen other companies and communications that foster STRs (20,000+ reservations over Jazz Fest). Is it good for the economy? Yes and no. Visitors that experience’ life as a local’ still spend money and on a shop-small level they help independent businesspeople; they go to local restaurants and grocery stores, they frequent off the beaten path clubs and watering holes, they hang in our parks and on our porches. In short, they get the low down on the slowdown of our way of life from locals and avoid ‘tourist traps’. However, our service industry (28,000+) suffers when the ‘captive audience’ isn’t spending money on parking, room service, cookie cutter eating places and attractions aimed at “once in a blue moon” visitor.
To be
fair: the average STR guest doesn’t want
to be held captive as a tourist; they want to have a holiday and immerse
themselves in our culture, music, food and funk. Period. On the other hand,
landlords that take housing out of commerce; creating timeshares; evicting
tenants; have multiple houses set up as STRs or even locals that rent multiple
spaces and ‘flip’ them for (untaxed) income are, in fact, giving STRs a bad
name and some even opine that they are the scum of the earth. (And yes, there
are these people living amongst us.)
Consider
that there are over 7,000 pieces of living places
or living spaces available to the
short term renter, 72% of which are entire residences (houses, apartments) as of
this writing. The majority of people
renting those spaces do not live in them and in some cases don’t even live in
this city.
The
result is that, as those spaces are taken out of commerce, other available
spaces become more expensive to rent and harder to find—STRs have become a
business that pushes people out of their homes and creates streets of strangers
instead of neighbors. Fact is, at any
given time someone from somewhere else can rent a couch to a castle in New
Orleans, on a short term basis, while you and your constituents are finding it harder
and harder to find places to live in or that you could afford to move into here.
It’s also a fact that in many cases, existing rents are being raised out of the
reach of long time residents to keep up with supply and demand.
The original idea of AIRBNB was to
rent a space in your house to a person or persons that wanted to be your friend
and guest. We’ve lost that to greed and that is not good.
I’m not
sure how to opinionate on this complex subject and certainly no one is asking
for my opinion and/or possible options and alternatives; however, when we have
an equation that has homelessness on one side and a housing shortage on the
other, it would question a thinking and caring person’s logic of ignoring the
possibility of the relevance of that correlation to STRs.
Meanwhile,
while neighbors differ with neighbors and attitudes escalate,and visitors start
feeling alienated, our city officials appear complacent and nothing gets
resolved. Ask opinions on the street and the word is that, in fact, the mayor
himself wants the proliferation of STRs; I don’t know. Emails to AIRBNB have
gone unanswered; City Hall doesn’t answer either. The best that I can tell you
is to be aware that this is a real issue and concern to be examined and acted
upon. One that is not about to go away.