A vacation rental in an old mill house close to downtown Bend. Credit: Laurel Brauns

Right now, the City of Bend is an island surrounded by Deschutes County, in the eyes of vacation-rental rules anyway.

Deschutes County Commissioners passed an order April 6 to fine renters and owners $1,000 per day if they book a short-term rental reservation for recreational purposes. The County still permits essential STR stays for health, safety or employment.

A vacation rental in an old mill house close to downtown Bend. Credit: Laurel Brauns

Eric King, Bend City manager, issued a โ€œstrong advisory temporarily discouraging recreation or vacation travel here during this COVID-19 emergency,โ€ according to a press release from the City on March 27.

But thereโ€™s no way to enforce it. It’s just an advisory.

The Source reported on the โ€œsend them a letterโ€ method of code enforcement the City has reserved for the vacation rental industry in Bend. Hundreds of vacation rental owners operate without a license in the City of Bend, and brazenly advertise their properties on Airbnb and VRBO.

But not all vacation rental owners are rule breakers. Many pay their taxes and dutifully register their property with the City year after year. It’s the scofflaws and opportunists who the people in Bend might be worried about during a worldwide pandemic and statewide lockdown.

Recreation communities, where people come in… some of the statistics that I read today… [these towns] experience rates of infection that are four times higher than other rural counties. -Mayor Sally Russell

Wednesday night at the Bend City Council meeting, Eric King presented an updated short-term rental resolution, which would allow the City to actually enforce King’s โ€œstrong advisory,โ€ banning recreational travel in Bend. It was written to maintain consistency with the Countyโ€™s order, but made a violation a civil infraction with a $750 fine per day.

Over the past few weeks, the City received a number of calls from people who live in Bend who were concerned that people from out of town were coming to Bend to shelter in place, instead of remaining in their home communities, according to City Attorney Mary Winters.

Winters emphasized that now (if the Council didn’t not pass the resolution) when people call the City to complain that some STR owners arenโ€™t following the rules, City staff will just have to tell the callers thereโ€™s no way to enforce Kingโ€™s prior order.

The April 15 Bend City Council meeting was primarily a virtual affair. Lags in internet connections made communicating a challenge. Credit: Screenshot via City of Bend

Mayor Sally Russell told other City Council members that there are temporary restrictions on vacation rentals all over the county, and Hood River, Cannon Beach and Tillamook have all instituted enforcement mechanisms in response to the pandemic.

โ€œI think the conversation that we need to have today is about risk and economic recovery and how those are interlinked,โ€ Russell said before directing her colleagues to share โ€œhigh levelโ€ perspectives about the issue.

โ€œThis would indicate that City is being consistent with the country, other counties across the state,โ€ said City Councilor Barb Campbell. โ€œI donโ€™t want there to be any signal that weโ€™re are the one place where they can come and enjoy the COVID crisisโ€ฆ here in beautiful Bend, Oregon.โ€

โ€œMy goal is protecting the best we can the people who call Bend home,โ€ said Councilor Gena Goodman-Campbell. โ€œWe are closed; I donโ€™t think that is completely clear across the board.โ€

But Russell, Campbell and Goodman-Campbellโ€”who were all leaning in favor of passing the resolution with the fines during the meetingโ€”had no support from other the four other Councilors.

Councilors Bruce Abernethy, Bill Moseley, Justin Livingston and Chris Piper all argued against regulations, because they said they appeared to only target short-term rentals, and that thereโ€™s already ‘voluntary compliance’ in the tourism community.

โ€œIs this a solution looking for a problem?,โ€ Livingston asked. โ€œOccupancy rates are really low; a lot of hotels and short-term rentals are doing the right thing.โ€

Moseley said that if we only listen to the โ€œhealth voice,โ€ society risks a future Great Depression.

โ€œRecreation communities, where people come in… some of the statistics that I read today… [these towns] experience rates of infection that are four times higher than other rural counties,” countered Russell. โ€œThe community would go from no COVID cases to 90 very quickly. This is very infectious and very impactful. This also affects the capacity in the hospital system, medical care system, public safety, all service providers… We are now an island in the middle of Deschutes County.โ€

When Russell asked for someone to make a motion to pass the resolution, no one said anything, instead beginning debating their positions again. The City Council spent nearly an hour in total debating the addition of an enforcement mechanism for short-term rentals and never voted on it.

โ€œWhat Iโ€™d like to suggest at this time is we simply move forward to item number 10 on our agenda,โ€ Russell said. And so they did.ย 

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7 Comments

  1. Bend has a housing shortage, right? And we elect a city council that restricts housing supply by prohibiting rentals? If I own property in Bend Iโ€™m LMAO all the way to the bank.

  2. “Hundreds of vacation rental owners operate without a license in the City of Bend, and brazenly advertise their properties on Airbnb and VRBO.” Are you freaking kidding me? These people are stealing from the city (which means you and me) by operating without a license and not paying TOT. Why isn’t Bend doing something about this? It’s bad enough that short-term rentals are allowed … but Bend isn’t even enforcing its own rules?

  3. Thanks, Bruce, for standing up for those of us who live in neighborhoods where we are surrounded by vacation rentals. It is really great that you took the health of community into consideration…for maybe a nanosecond. Now, get back to handing out those Knute Buehler leaflets. Maybe when IHOP re-opens you can get a job cooking waffles. Oh wait, you are an Ivy Leaguer so you know what’s best. Pathetic. The best decision you have made for Bend this year is to not seek re-election. –Michael Funke

  4. Something needs to be done to enforce the laws pertaining to short term rental..it can be done easily

  5. I canโ€™t believe the flagrant disregard for health and safety!! We live next to a short term rental property owned by people from An other State. We have been shelter in place from the beginning and several of our neighbors and family are immune compromised. This is hell on earth living next to the rental property in the first place and now itโ€™s down right criminal!!
    What does Kate Brown think of this? Why are we going against what is right for the community in the first place??

  6. Flagrant disregard for the health and safety of this community by Abernathy, Moseley, Linvingston, and Piper. People from metro areas all over the country are essentially being invited to stay here. Have you seen how airBNBs are being marketed in Bend? “Healthy Haven” and “Open during lock-down.” Shameful. Our trailheads are supposedly closed so what kind of message is this sending?

  7. Abernathy, Moseley, Livingston, and Piper are the ones to vote out in November – all 4 are either not running or up for re-election. Itโ€™s time for Bendites to have a City Council that listens to what we locals want instead of developers. We need a Council that puts our health over their profits.

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