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The oceanside community of Lozano Beach is debating whether to allow
homeowners to rent out their homes on a weekly basis during the summer. Such
rentals produce high incomes for the owners and the city, which gets part of
this income through a 15-percent surcharge to the owner. “This can be a boon to
our coffers,” said Rick Brown, city manager. “In the summer, homeowners can
bring in $2,000 a week or more.”
However, these rentals can also be a can of worms. The city stopped
allowing weekly rentals 10 years ago because of the problems they were
generating. Two, three, or even four families would pile into a two- or
three-bedroom house. Then they would park their cars on the lawn and produce
huge amounts of trash. Sometimes they would toss this trash on the streets and
sidewalks.
Noise would be another problem. Some people would party late and loud every
night. This abuse created a lot of friction with neighbors and resulted in extra
work for city maintenance crews and for police, who had to respond almost hourly
to residents’ complaints about noise, music, trash, and parking problems. But
now, the city’s budget problems are making it reconsider its ban.
City officials will hold a community meeting next week to listen to the
pros and cons. One official has already suggested a proposal. He thinks that a
fine might work. If the city has to respond to complaints, the homeowner will be
charged $200 per response. Such a fine might cause the homeowner to be careful
to rent only to people that he is sure will be considerate of the neighbors. The
city would still get 15 percent of the rental fee, even if the homeowner’s rent
were totally offset by fines. The city would post inconsiderate renters’ names
on the city website so that other homeowners would know about them.
Some officials think the ban should be continued because these visitors to
the community have already proven that they have no consideration for others.
Their money isn’t worth the headaches they cause. |
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