Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. short-term rental restrictions reducing rents, saving tenants millions: study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Sep, 2024 09:43 AM
  • B.C. short-term rental restrictions reducing rents, saving tenants millions: study

Crackdowns on short-term rentals in British Columbia have effectively reduced rents by 5.7 per cent, saving tenants more than $600 million last year, says a report led by the Canada Research Chair in Urban Governance at McGill University.

That figure is the result of municipal restrictions, in particular requirements that short-term rental units must be located within the operator's principal residence.

In Vancouver, for example, the report says renters are paying an average of $147 less each month than they would have without the city's principal residence rule.

The report, led by research chair David Wachsmuth, says the recent provincewide regulation for communities with more than 10,000 residents has the power to carry similar savings across B.C., helping to ease affordability challenges.

The provincial change took effect in May, requiring listings on platforms such as Airbnb and Vrbo to be located in the operator's principal residence and one secondary suite.

Assuming the provincewide requirements have the same efficacy as existing municipal rules, Wachsmuth's report says tenants in those cities should see rents decline by four per cent, amounting to a total savings of $592 million each year by 2027.

Renters would pay an extra $1 billion within two years if the province's rules were to be repealed after this year, says the report released Wednesday.

That's a finding Premier David Eby's New Democrats are highlighting in a statement a month before B.C.'s election, saying provincial Conservative Leader John Rustad recently told supporters he would reverse the short-term rental restrictions.

The report says the BC Hotel Association commissioned the researchers to provide an early analysis of the province's short-term rental rules. The authors are exclusively responsible for all of the analysis, findings and conclusions, it adds.

The researchers looked at 52 of 55 neighbourhoods across B.C. with a principal residence restriction in place in January 2023. The analysis found rents were an average of $110 lower than they would have been without the rule.

B.C. passed its provincewide short-term rental accommodations law in October 2023 and the government has been phasing in the measures.

Wachsmuth's report report says a registration system with additional "accountability requirements" for listing platforms is expected early next year. 

It says the "full implications" of B.C.'s rules won't become clear until then, when the platforms will be obligated to remove listings without valid licences.

But the report concludes that B.C.'s principal residence restrictions mean average monthly rents will be $94 lower in the fall of 2027 than they otherwise would have been.

The researchers also looked at the number of Airbnb listings before and after the province's principal residence requirement took effect in May. 

They found 13,624 "frequently rented entire homes" in B.C. listed on the platform in June 2023, along with a further 34,665 different kinds of properties.

Of the frequently rented homes, the report says just over 86 per cent were still visible by July 2024. Close to 89 per cent of the other listings were also still visible.

"In general, the more active the listing, the lower chance it was still visible on Airbnb after May 2024," the report notes.

The report says the researchers used public and private data sources to conduct their analysis, as well as a modelling approach that's widely used by economists.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Human Rights Tribunal says it can hear allegations of online hate speech

B.C. Human Rights Tribunal says it can hear allegations of online hate speech
British Columbia's Human Rights Tribunal has ruled it has the authority to hear cases about allegations of online hate speech. The tribunal says provincial human rights laws against publications that perpetrate discrimination or hatred fall under the province's jurisdiction, not the federal government's control over telecommunications.

B.C. Human Rights Tribunal says it can hear allegations of online hate speech

BC's unemployment rate second lowest in Canada

BC's unemployment rate second lowest in Canada
B-C's jobs minister says the province is holding steady in the face of high interest rates and slower growth globally, adding nearly 64-thousand jobs in the past year. Brenda Bailey says the unemployment rate is 5.5 per cent, the second lowest among the provinces, while B-C had the highest average hourly wage last month.

BC's unemployment rate second lowest in Canada

Info needed in Vancouver assault

Info needed in Vancouver assault
Police in Vancouver are appealing to the public for information after a serious assault in the city's Downtown Eastside neigbourhood. They say it happened just after 1:30 a-m, when officers were called to reports of a man with life-threatening injuries near the intersection of Main and Hastings.

Info needed in Vancouver assault

Canada imposes sanctions on anniversary of fraudulent 2020 Belarus election

Canada imposes sanctions on anniversary of fraudulent 2020 Belarus election
The sanctions are in response to what Joly describes as ongoing and systematic human rights abuses in Belarus, and support for Russia's illegal war of aggression against Ukraine.  Belarus' authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko marked 30 years in power in that country last month. 

Canada imposes sanctions on anniversary of fraudulent 2020 Belarus election

'Extra hoops': Parks Canada's lease system, building rules could delay Jasper rebuild

'Extra hoops': Parks Canada's lease system, building rules could delay Jasper rebuild
Residents of Jasper, Alta., who lost their homes in last month’s wildfire face unique rebuilding challenges tied to leasing provisions nearly as old as Canada, followed modern rules dictating what they can and can’t construct. Lawyer Jessica Reed said property owners in the townsite in Jasper National Park own their buildings but, unlike other municipalities, don’t own the land they sit on.

'Extra hoops': Parks Canada's lease system, building rules could delay Jasper rebuild

Heavy rain hits Eastern Canada as remnants of tropical storm Debby move in

Heavy rain hits Eastern Canada as remnants of tropical storm Debby move in
Remnants of tropical storm Debby were expected to bring up to 120 millimetres of rain to parts of Eastern Canada as they merge with another low pressure system over the Great Lakes. The storm system has started passing through southern Ontario and Quebec today, prompting Environment Canada to issue alerts and warnings for communities between Cornwall, Ont., and Quebec City about the risk of flash flooding.

Heavy rain hits Eastern Canada as remnants of tropical storm Debby move in