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Tony Gioventu: Short-term rentals can't be exempted from bylaws

In addition to local government bylaws across the province, an owner running a short-term rental business must comply with a strata's new bylaws effective the day it is filed
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Tony Gioventu is the executive director of the Condominium Home Owners Association of sa国际传媒 SUBMITTED

Dear Tony: Our strata has been plagued with short-term accommodation problems. The occupants have damaged property, violated numerous bylaws and now lost keys and Fobs for building access. The cost to the strata corporation and security risk for our owners is endless. Long-term rentals are fine and we have no restrictions, but we passed a bylaw in December to prohibit short-term accommodations and now the owner of three units is claiming the developer gave them a grandfathering provision. There is no evidence of this, and we cannot find any reference to grandfathering in the act. Before we enforce and start fining $1,000 a day, is it possible they are exempt?

Rayleen A., Vancouver

Since 2010, the strata property act and realestate development marketing act make provisions for exemptions of rentals of strata lots, when declared and filed by the owner developer. This is a Form J rental disclosure filed in the disclosure statement of sale with the superintendent of real estate. It applies to your strata corporation as filed in 2011; however, it only provides an exemption from rental bylaws for the defined strata lots, not short-term accommodations which are business/hotel activities. This could be a source of possible confusion. The term grandfathering does not appear in the act. The act provides for several conditional exemptions such as rentals bylaws, age restrictions, and pet restrictions. Unless your bylaws have created other special exemptions, which might not be enforceable if they are treating owners and tenants differently, the exemptions are based on simple conditions.

If you have a pet, are under the proposed age, or have a tenant when a new related bylaw passes restricting those conditions, the bylaw does not apply to the existing relationships at the time the bylaw is passed. But these are conditional, and once the pet, under age person, or tenant departs, the bylaws come into effect. Any new pets must comply with the bylaws, new residents must comply with the age restriction, and within one year of the existing tenant leaving, the landlord must comply with the new rental bylaw. Short-term accommodations do not have such exemptions.

In addition to local government bylaws across the province, the owner must comply with the new bylaws effective the day it is filed in the land title registry. The city of Vancouver also prohibits an owner from operating a hotel-type service and using multiple units for short term accommodations. The short-term rental must be from their principle residence. Every strata must also apply the sa国际传媒 Human Rights Code when enforcing bylaws. There is an obligation to accommodate owners, tenants and occupants for a variety of conditions that relate to health, access, assistance and support animals.

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Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominium Home Owners Association

Kindly note CHOA is a member-based, non-profit association. If your strata is not currently a CHOA member please consider joining — membership details are posted on our