Updates
This Week’s Top Agenda Items
- New regulations for short-term rentals
- Council frustrated by unused funds
- Final Food Justice Fund recipients chosen
Regulating short-term rentals ★ ★
- Councilmember Gross introduced legislation to help regulate short-term housing rentals. There are currently no regulations.
- Regulations would apply to investors who buy property specifically to rent through companies such as Airbnb. Regulations would include:
- An operating license (renewed annually) and approval from the Zoning Administrator.
- Limits for maximum stays (28 consecutive days) and number of guests (varied by property).
- A required daily register of guests.
- Each operating violation will be a summary offense with a $500 fine per unit per month.
- Regulations would not apply to homeowners who occasionally rent their personal dwelling.
- A second piece of legislation amending the Use Regulations portion of the Zoning Code to include and define short-term rentals will need to be sent to the Planning Commission for Report & Recommendation.
- Council will discuss these pieces of legislation at a future Standing Committees meeting.
Council frustrated by unused funds ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
- Council received a package of 15 bills from the Controller’s office for removal of unencumbered funds from dormant Capital Projects.
- City Code requires this process annually so that unused money doesn’t sit indefinitely.
- “Dormant” encompasses job numbers with no activity for three years or job numbers that have less than $1,000 remaining and no activity for at least a year.
- Council members expressed frustration that they were not alerted about potentially lost funds in enough time to use them.
- For example, there was $234,149 remaining from a 2013 $1.6 million federal grant for the City’s bike share program. Because the grant expired, the money no longer exists.
- There was additionally one request for re-appropriation and re-allocation, which would distribute $1,396,530.83 across multiple projects.
- Council members also expressed frustration that they were not consulted about where eligible unused funds are being re-allocated.
- The package will be held for one week so that Council can have input where appropriate.
Final Food Justice Fund recipients chosen ★
- Council affirmed the distribution of the remaining $1.5 million in the Food Justice Fund. Below are total grant distributions by district; individual grants are capped at $75,000:
- District 1 (Councilmember Wilson): $77,682
- District 2 (Councilmember Kail-Smith): $135,000
- District 3 (Councilmember Charland): $122,681
- District 4 (Councilmember Coghill): $75,000
- District 5 (Councilmember Warwick): $180,800
- District 6 (Council President Lavelle): $105,634
- District 7 (Councilmember Gross): $28,579
- District 8 (Councilmember Strassburger): $18,470
- District 9 (Councilmember Mosley): $393,753
- Multiple districts: $152,764
- Citywide: $209,645
- Uses of the money include distributing free food/meals, supporting community gardens and non-profit urban agriculture and job training or youth employment in fields related to the food system, among others.
- The Fund was established by Council in 2023 with $3 million in American Rescue Plan Act money.
- Nonprofit organization New Sun Rising manages and disperses the grants. The fund’s Governance Committee approves the final list of awardees based on New Sun Rising’s recommendations.
- Parks and Recreation Director Vargas said they received 101 applications requesting in excess of $4 million. In choosing recipients, the Committee sought to represent a variety of neighborhoods as well as the size, scope, and scale of requesting organizations.
New regulations for short-term rentals, frustrations with unused funds and $1.5 million for food justice—City Council Week of July 14