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Bowen Island to opt into B.C.’s new short-term rental restrictions

Bowen Island Mayor Andrew Leonard says staff will be recommending the municipality opt into the province's new short-term rental rules. This would restrict short-term rentals like Airbnb to a homeowner's principal home. – Mar 25, 2024

Bowen Island is opting into the province’s new short-term rental rules.

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At Monday’s council meeting, councillors voted to accept a staff recommendation that the community participate in the new rental restriction scheme.

The new regulations, which restrict short-term rental use to homes that are a primary residence or secondary suite, automatically apply to cities of 10,000 people or more.

Smaller communities like Bowen Island, which has a population of 4,200, can voluntarily opt-in by the end of March.

Mayor Andrew Leonard said the community has been split on the proposal.

Many who oppose adopting the new regulations cite the need for short-term rentals to help them pay for the maintenance of cabins that have been in their family for generations.

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Those who support it have raised concerns about tourism pressure on the island and the lack of affordable housing.

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“The rental market on Bowen is a difficult market. Bowen Island has primarily been built out as single-family residential; there is a dearth of rental accommodations on the island,” Leonard said.

“In the summer when we get impacted — I think more severely than most municipalities in Metro Vancouver — by the tourism season, it is very difficult for businesses to find accommodations for their workers.”

Bowen Island already has regulations governing short-term rentals, implemented in 2020, which allow a full home to be used for short-term rentals for fewer than 120 days a year after acquiring a business licence.

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A 2023 review of short-term rentals on the island identified 25 properties on the island being used for short-term rental that did not have the owner using the home as their primary residence.

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