Florida Court Invalidates Short Term Rental Restrictions
According to this report, a Florida state court has invalidated a municipality's attempt to regulate short-term rentals:
Milo [the property owner] bought more than a dozen homes on or near the island beginning in 2005 and started renting them out on a daily and weekly basis, something the city thought was addressed in -- and forbidden by -- its zoning ordinance.
[The court] didn't see it that way. In his seven-page decision, he said the city zoning code lacked key definitions and relied too heavily on state statutes -- statutes that weren't adequately referenced in its zoning code -- when making its case against Milo.
City officials thought they had a solid case, based on current code language and state rules that Planning and Zoning Director Tom Slaughter said in 2006 stipulate "the duration and frequency of rental of a single-family dwelling unit within the RSF (residential, single family) is restricted to not more than three rentals in a calendar year for periods of less than 30 days or one calendar month, whichever is less."
Download the complaint here. Milo v. City of Venice, Case No. 2008 CA 552 SC (filed Jan. 11, 2008).



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