Hawaii
Related: About this forumThe Lahaina fire worsened Maui's housing shortage. Now officials eye limiting tourist Airbnb rentals
HONOLULU (AP) Alicia Humiston bought her condo in Lahaina after she visited Maui and fell for its rainforests, lava fields and the whales that gather offshore. She travels there about three times a year and rents out her unit for short periods when shes not in Hawaii.
Maui was my dream place, she said in a phone interview from her home in Coeur dAlene, Idaho.
But now Mauis mayor wants to make it impossible for Humiston and thousands of other condo owners to rent their properties to tourists. Instead, he wants them rented long-term to Maui locals to address a chronic housing shortage that reached a new crisis point after last Augusts deadly wildfire burned the homes of 12,000 residents.
The mayors proposal faces multiple legislative and bureaucratic hurdles, starting Tuesday with a Maui Planning Commission meeting. Yet it has inflamed an already-heated debate about the future of one of the worlds best-known travel destinations: Will Maui continue to cater to tourists, who power the local economy? Or will it curb tourism to address persistent complaints that visitors are overwhelming the islands beaches and roads and making housing unaffordable?
https://apnews.com/article/hawaii-maui-wildfires-vacation-rentals-housing-362b482610fbb9d9bbb9da51989b5398
Marcus IM
(3,001 posts)Capitalism 101: Rentals for the rich. Let the poor and homeless people just go away.
msongs
(70,165 posts)which get approved quickly by obliging government "workers" while affordable housing is just put on the back burner
Grumpy Old Guy
(3,550 posts)The housing shortage was already acute before the fire. Now it's untenable. Short term rentals are very profitable for the owners, but they only exacerbate the housing crisis. Investors can always invest someplace else. Lahaina and the rest of the island desperately need affordable rental units. The owners are still making money, they don't need to be greedy.