As Santa Rosa neighborhoods simmer over vacation rentals, council poised to vote on temporary rules

Lyla

Architect Dale Sessions moved last year from San Francisco to Santa Rosa’s forested and upscale Montecito Meadows neighborhood for the peace and quiet.

But his dreams of tranquility have been shattered by a short-term rental property next door, he said.

Advertised online as a private Wine Country retreat among the redwoods, the property regularly hosts revelry that torments Sessions and his neighbors, who say they’ve endured the coming and going of strangers and carousing of large groups, keeping them awake at night and raising fire fears with cigarette smoking and gatherings around a fire pit.

“I didn’t move here to live next to a hotel,“ Sessions said. ”When there’s nothing going on over there the loudest noise we have around here are the squirrels.“

Among the worst offenses were a series of weddings held over the summer, Sessions and two of his neighbors said in recent interviews.

“Without regulations they can do whatever they want,” neighbor Monica Bryant, a teacher and artist, said of such properties.

In response, Sessions and his neighbors have agitated for regulations on short-term rentals. Their outcry has been joined by other cluster of neighbors in the Montecito area. Combined with the worries of public safety officials and affordable housing advocates, their complaints have coalesced into a push for emergency action by city leaders.

Some residents, including Sessions, say the move is way overdue. Santa Rosa officials have lagged behind other Sonoma County cities and the county in writing rules for such properties, which have exploded in popularity through websites like Airbnb and Vrbo.

The Santa Rosa City Council on Tuesday evening will vote on adopting an “urgency ordinance” regulating the properties, following an accelerated policy making process in recent months. If passed, the ordinance could impact more than 350 properties officials believe to currently be on the vacation rental market.

They would be newly subject to rules governing noise, occupancy levels and how managers and owners must respond to complaints.

Dr. Harry Albers, a Santa Rosa dentist, author and lecturer who owns the rental property next-door to Sessions, says neighbors complaints about the house are overblown and are fueling an overreaction by City Hall.

He allowed his house to be booked for weddings over the summer, he said, but stopped the practice after a meeting with his concerned neighbors. “They were lovely weddings,” he said.

Albers no longer holds events, he says, and groups that do stay — the property is currently listed as holding 13 guests for around $1,400 a night on Airbnb — are respectful, he said.

“What (Sessions) calls hell is people having dinner once or twice a month on a deck and talking to each other,” Albers said.

Albers considers his property an asset to the city and county, hosting travelers and clients for restaurants and wineries. His guests are families and friends sharing time together who do not want hotel rooms, he said.

The dispute is a microcosm of conflicts reported around the city, but especially in the attractive, wooded enclaves of eastern Santa Rosa, where longstanding residents report a marked increase in properties converting to short-term rentals in recent years.

Those reports have driven worries from public safety officials about fire safety and evacuation routes, and sparked fears of diminishing housing stock and fallout on neighborhood character.

Tax revenue also is at stake. Officials say Santa Rosa could be missing out on as much as $1.2 million a year in revenue through uncollected lodging taxes and business fees from unregistered rentals.

Officials have not thoroughly studied how many homes have been taken off the market for use as short-term rentals. The city, as of July, had around 197 registered short-term rental properties, according to officials. But an outside firm provided an analysis to the city that found as many as 358 short-term rental properties advertising on various websites dedicated to the industry.

Albers is a longtime resident who converted his house to a rental property but said he still lives there most of the time. There’s some evidence that other properties in Santa Rosa’s wealthier hillside neighborhoods are being targeted by investors, however, who see a chance to make money and pay for a mortgage by buying large homes and renting them to groups of Wine Country visitors.

David Long, an engineer who lives near a property on Sunrise Avenue that also has drawn a litany of neighbor complaints, has been tracking the ownership of some short-term rentals in his neighborhood.

https://www.northbaybusinessjournal.com/article/news/as-santa-rosa-neighborhoods-simmer-over-vacation-rentals-council-poised-to/

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