Showing posts with label short-term_rentals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short-term_rentals. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Rules for Renters 'n Owners

RULES FOR RENTERS
Owners must supply their renters with a copy of our Pacific Tower Rules and Regulations.  If your renters know the rules then they know the pool is closed at 9 PM, not to throw towels over their balcony railings, etc. etc and YOU, the owner will not be fined when your renters obey the rules.  A copy of the rules can be obtained in our Maintenance office or from Menas Realty (hard copy of download) for a small fee.

RULES FOR OWNERS
Speaking of renters, Pacific Tower does NOT allow short-term vacation rentals such as Airbnb, VRBO and other internet establishments.  The shortest rental we allow is 90 days and a copy of that lease must be turned in to our or Menas Realty office.  Your Board monitors the web for anyone advertising a short-term rental in our building and does not take this kind of violation lightly.

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Pacific Tower, a HOTEL?!

Lots of news articles have been popping up lately about people renting out their condos thru internet websites like Airbnb. The Pacific Tower Homeowner’s Association wants to remind OWNERS that renting out your place for less than 90 days is NOT allowed. In other words, you can only rent out your place four times a year at most,  AND you MUST submit a copy of your lease to the onsite Manager’s Office for logging by the HOA Rental Committee. Owners should note that these rules also apply to your Renters who attempt to sublet a portion of their place.

                                The Reasons Behind our Rules:
We don’t want our building used as a hotel because weekend guests don’t know or even care about our rules. We don’t want strangers who are vacationing and eager to party, smoking, bringing food or glass bottles to the pool, going for a midnight swim, tossing their wet suits over the railings, stuffing banana peels or Drano down our delicate garbage disposals, giving out our entry access codes to their new-found pals and doing all the careless things strangers can do when they’re occupying somebody else’s property.
               
                          If You Rent Out your Condo:
1.    Advertising must state 90 Days as the minimum number of rental days.
2.    Rental agents must be notified of Pacific Towers 90 day rule.
3.    Renters must notify our onsite Manager when moving out.
4.    Owners must give renters a copy of the Rules and Regulations (available for $5 from onsite Manager or Menas Realty).

      What Happens if I Ignore the Rules and rent My place on weekends or other short terms?
                     The Board will find out and has the discretion to fine you for every day you are not in compliance with our rules (thus removing the profit from your rental scheme).

The above is an abbreviated, reader-friendly version of the Rules. Below are the the actual rules.                             
                                                 The Rules
Short term occupancy of units in Pacific Tower is prohibited and the Owner may be held liable for fines arising from violations of any one or all of the following sections of the CC&Rs.
Section 3.3; Section 3.4A; Section 5.10; Section 6.1B; Section 6.1C; Section 8.2 A-B-C-D and F; and Section 9.1. The applicable Rules that may result in penalties for violation by such activities are Rules Section A.2; Section B.1 (a-b-c-and d); Section B.3 and Section H.10.  
The Board has the primary responsibility to protect the Common Areas and the interests of all the members / Owners / residents in Pacific Tower.

Community association living requires the full cooperation of all residents to be a good neighbor. Getting to know and complying with the Governing Documents is a good start. With a little consideration and understanding, all residents within Pacific Tower may enjoy the quality of life provided by living here.

The success of our community is founded on the basic principles of common decency, respect and consideration for the basic rights of all neighbors.  The Board urges all Owners to consider the Governing Documents as a ready reminder of the various obligations residents have to one another in day-to-day living at Pacific Tower.
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Saturday, October 25, 2014

Rule-breaker had to pay HOA $106K

SHORT-TERM RENTALS CAN BE COSTLY FOR OWNERS
Rule-breaker had to pay HOA $106K
San Diego Union Tribune By Jonathan Horn  Oct. 25, 2014
If you own a luxurious condo in downtown and want to make some easy money, you can rent out your unit for a weekend via popular sites like Airbnb, Craigslist and Vacation Rentals By Owner.
Just don’t let your homeowners association find out — you could be writing them an even bigger check.
That’s what happened to Thomas Stevens, who in July paid The Mark Condominium Association more than $106,000 after a Superior Court judge ruled that he continually violated the opulent downtown building’s regulations by renting out his 19th-floor unit on a nightly and weekend basis, something Stevens says he did only once. After he wrote the check, The Mark’s association posted notices in the elevators, informing residents of the victory as a tacit reminder to resist any temptation to list their units for leases shorter than the 90 days the complex requires.
With the skyrocketing popularity of sites like Airbnb and VRBO.com providing travelers an alternative to hotels, homeowners associations across downtown are taking steps to ensure their residents don’t get tempted to take advantage of the opportunity.
Some municipalities also regulate short-term rentals.
This week, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors voted to make the use of Airbnb legal for the first time in several years, a measure that moves to Mayor Ed Lee’s desk for signature. In New York, it’s still illegal to rent out a residence to someone for fewer than 30 days, rendering Airbnb moot for short-term stays. The city of San Diego doesn’t ban short-term house rentals, but requires a minimum seven-day stay for condos in some areas. Those who rent out their units are required by the city to obtain certification and collect transient occupancy taxes.
“Owners don’t want weekenders or other short-term stays because it turns their home atmosphere into a hotel atmosphere with visitors who can be loud, disruptive, rude and simply not use the care required to help keep the community clean, safe and free of damage,” said Laurie Kendrick Coxworth, general manager for ICON, a complex on 10th Avenue, which requires at least 30-day leases of its units.
Kendrick Coxworth said each year around Comic-Con, the complex sends out reminder notices to residents not to list their units for the international event. She said the board is considering raising the fine for an initial offense from $250 to $1,000. Across downtown, at the 43-story Electra complex off Harbor Drive, the board two years ago increased the fine from $50 for a first offense to a maximum $5,000, although general manager Jim Jennings said most first-timers are fined $500.
Jennings said he checks sites like Airbnb every two weeks to see if people are advertising their units, and even more frequently around Comic-Con. If there’s a listing, he sends the owner a notice, as the building requires a minimum one-year lease. Jennings said he also finds out about short-term rentals through word-of-mouth.
“You’re not going to keep anything secret in a vertical village,” he said.
David Peters, attorney for The Mark’s association, said visitors tend to get caught because they ask doormen and other workers at the buildings for services more akin to those in a hotel.
“I’ve had them order food from security, and they don’t understand it’s not a hotel and that it’s not their concierge,” he said.
The ruling against Stevens came three months after he sold the two-bedroom unit for $774,000, which was $175,000 more than he and his parents paid in December 2009. The $106,059 payment to The Mark took away any sort of profit.
“It was kind of a wash,” said Stevens, 49, who owns a demolition company in Orange County. “I had to pay my attorney, and all my time wasted. I really didn’t want to sell the unit.”
Leases at The Mark have to be at least 90 days to comply with the building’s regulations, which owners agree to when they buy a unit. Stevens said he only violated the rule once, when he said there was a lack of clarity in the requirement. He said he rented his condo out to a teacher visiting from Ohio for a week, pocketing $2,500. He said he received a violation letter after she commented on the building to someone at the front desk. He eventually paid a $350 fine, and then adjusted his advertisement on VRBO.com to a reflect a minimum 90-day stay.
“I turned people down all the time because I didn’t want to violate the HOA rules,” he said, speaking by phone from Orange County this week.
Peters, The Mark’s attorney, said that Stevens continued to rent out his unit for short terms, despite warnings to stop.
“He was basically bringing people in, and claiming they were his friends and his guests,” Peters said. “They were not his friends and his guests.”
Stevens said they actually were his friends. That includes Tunch Ilkin, a retired member of the Pittsburgh Steelers who stayed in the condo during visits to San Diego to care for his wife, who died in 2012 after a battle with cancer. A spokesman for the Steelers confirmed to U-T San Diego that Ilkin did stay at the property. Stevens said otherwise he and his wife and children would come down from Laguna Niguel for weekends, visiting places like SeaWorld, or that his parents would use it to escape the heat in Scottsdale, Ariz.
In the end, Superior Court Justice Jay Bloom found for The Mark, awarding $16,059 in costs and $90,000 in attorneys fees for breach of contract.
Seth Kaplowitz, a real-estate attorney and finance lecturer at San Diego State University, said homeowners associations are aggressive about enforcement because they want to sustain quality of life and property values. He said other parts of the county aren’t as strict on short-term rentals, noting there’s a large market in North County during Del Mar racing season.
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