Charlottetown's short-term rental bylaw passes 1st reading unanimously - Action News
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Charlottetown's short-term rental bylaw passes 1st reading unanimously

Charlottetown council passed a first reading Monday of zoning and development rules that would regulate short-term rentals.

First reading passes 8-0 at Monday council meeting

The first reading to amend some zoning and development rules connected to short-term rentals in Charlottetown was passed Monday. The final vote is expected in February. (Laura Meader/CBC)

After years of discussion, it looks like Charlottetown city council is moving ahead with regulations for short-term rentals, or STRs.

At the regular January council meeting on Monday,the first reading of zoning and development bylaws thatwill regulate short-term rentals passed 8-0.

The ruleswould mean short-term rentals can only be the primary residence of the owner,one owner could not own several properties, and apartments would also not be allowed.Suites that are part of homes could be allowed as long as the owner is home at the time of the rental.

Affordable housing advocates hope more regulations for short-term rentals will free up more long-term rentals for people. (Laura Meader/CBC)

Mayor Philip Brownsaid the city is now laying out the framework for regulating STRs and called this the first step.

Brown said there are lots of discussions still to take place but regulations are coming.

He said other cities have followed the primary residence model as well.

"If you look at other jurisdictions, Vancouver, Victoria, Toronto, they took that route too," said Brown.

He said they will work with the community and STR operators.

Terry MacLeod, the city's planning chair,said it's a complexissue. The council package alone had almost 300 pages dedicated to background details from past public meetings, surveys and letters from the public.

Vote coming February

MacLeod called it an in-depth report and said the matter will be voted on at the next regular council meeting in Februrary.

"We basically told staff tonight we think you are on the right path, keep going," he said.

He expects basicregulations will be officially passed next month.

"We've got to try and find a happy medium," said MacLeod.

Penalties coming later

MacLeod doesn't expect penalties or fines this year, but that will come later.He said they'll encourage people to follow new bylaws once they exist, but they want to give peoplea grace period.

"It won't be such a cold shock to everybody," he said.

MacLeod said the city will need a budget and staffing to deal with enforcement costs, which is something Brown agrees with.

"We need a summary offence ticketing component to this bylaw," said Brown.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story said the matter will be voted upon on Tuesday, Feb. 1. In fact, it's expected to be voted upon at the next regular council meeting in February.
    Jan 11, 2022 3:19 PM AT