« More on DC Decision on Evidence of Pretext in Public Use Challenges | Main | Ninth Circuit: No Taking for Forced Attorney Low Bono* Labor »

November 15, 2007

Big Island: Bring Me Your Enthusiastic, Your Laden-With-Spending-Money Tourists, Yearning To Vacation Rent?

Check out this story from the Big Island's West Hawaii Today (free registration may be required), "Other counties' vacation rental laws could prove Big Island boon," which starts off with this theorem: "[t]he Big Island could soon experience a windfall of visitor dollars that would have otherwise flowed into Maui, Kauai and Honolulu."  In the article, the County of Hawaii's Planning Director contrasts the Big Island's treatment of short term (aka vacation) rentals with their treatment by the other three counties:

"We do enforce nonlicensed bed and breakfasts and rentals on agricultural land that are supposed to be farm dwellings," said Hawaii County Planning Director Chris Yuen. "But we're not engaged in any kind of crackdown on vacation rentals."

There's a reason the Big Island has escaped a controversy that could culminate next month with a federal lawsuit brought against Maui County by an association of renters: Hawaii County's zoning code does not distinguish between long-term rentals and short-term vacation units, also known as transient vacation rentals.

"The other counties do," Yuen said. "They define vacation rental periods as less than 'X' number of days."

. . . .

But Yuen, who said any kind of new ordinance regarding vacation rentals is not on his to-do list, said there are also benefits to the transient vacation unit business. "The upside is it allows a wider range of people to make money off the visitor economy," Yuen said. "There are a lot of other issues one can take on, and this one isn't one of them."

This reminds me of a common "big box store" dynamic on the mainland.  When one town or city bars such stores, they often just relocate to a neighboring jurisdiction which welcomes them  (along with their sales and property taxes) with open arms.  That dynamic doesn't really work in Hawaii with retail outlets, since it doesn't make a lot of sense to go to another island to shop, but as the article suggests, maybe it works on vacation rentals, since the visitor chooses between destinations before the trip.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/1062290/23397418

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Big Island: Bring Me Your Enthusiastic, Your Laden-With-Spending-Money Tourists, Yearning To Vacation Rent?:

Comments

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In

this blog is...

  • devoted to recent developments and commentary on regulatory takings, eminent domain, inverse condemnation, property rights, and Hawaii land use law

Author

Subscribe

Search


  • web
    inversecondemnation.com


May 2008

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Disclaimer

  • This blog is not legal advice. But you knew that already. Reading this blog does not make you a client, nor are any posts or comments on this blog subject to the attorney-client privilege. For legal advice, please retain an attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.

    This blog is not sponsored by the author's firm, and the views expressed by the author are just that; they are not the views of his clients, his firm or its clients, or anyone but for the author.

    © 2005-2008. All rights reserved.

Blog powered by TypePad