HILO, Hawaii Island 鈥 It鈥檚 not the first, but the second devastating punch that often causes the knockout.

Puna may be facing the same scenario.

The rural district remains reeling from a months-long volcanic disaster that destroyed agricultural crops, buried a prized coastline and turned its sole fishing port into an inaccessible beach. In a final, cruel blow, the fiery spectacle of Kilauea volcano has stopped, leaving little incentive for tourists to visit.

But some still do. They don鈥檛 find resorts or even big hotels, so most needing overnight lodging look to the hundreds of homes located in residential neighborhoods and offered on travel websites like Airbnb and VRBO, which stands for 鈥渧acation rental by owner.鈥

Available a maximum of 30 consecutive days, the short-term vacation rentals represent one of Puna鈥檚 remaining economic sectors.

That success is being threatened by proposed government regulations that could force operators off agricultural land that comprises virtually all of Puna 鈥 an area the size of Oahu 鈥 while also imposing fees and other mandates.

鈥淭his district is dying, and this is the final death blow,鈥 Puna Councilwoman Eileen O鈥橦ara said of

The only vote against regulating Hawaii County’s thousands of short-term rentals came from Puna Councilwoman Eileen O鈥橦ara. She lost her re-election bid in the August primary. Jason Armstrong/Civil Beat

O鈥橦ara was the lone dissenter Nov. 2 when the Hawaii County Council voted 5-1 to pass the bill on the first of two required votes. Fellow Puna Councilwoman Jen Ruggles isn鈥檛 weighing in on the bill, or any other, because she fears doing so would constitute 鈥渨ar crimes鈥 against sovereign Native Hawaiians.

O鈥橦ara, however, lost her re-election bid.

The measure鈥檚 purpose is to 鈥渕anage the impacts鈥 of short-term rentals and would not apply to hosted bed and breakfast establishments or lodging located in designated zones. It鈥檚 aimed at preserving housing inventories in tight markets like the tourism-based Kona Coast, reducing neighborhood noise and traffic, and generating applicable taxes.

No short-term rentals would be allowed on any lot in the state agriculture district and created after June 4, 1976, which is when the state started permitting only farm dwellings used to house agricultural workers on those lands. Some of the Puna neighborhoods were made after the deadline making them ineligible for short-term rentals.

Many of the Big Island鈥檚 8,000 short-term rentals are residential homes, like this one advertised in Puna, that have no sign or other business markings. Screenshot taken from VRBO.

Owners of older ag lots may qualify for a 鈥渘onconforming use certificate鈥 provided they can prove the short-term rental operation existed before the law takes effect since no new businesses would be allowed. Additional requirements include paying $250 yearly in addition to the standard one-time $500 tax and obtaining final building approval, which is another deal-breaker for certain operators.

The threat of those impacts has prompted bill opponents to claim lawmakers simply don鈥檛 care about Puna, which includes the Volcano community.

鈥淭his disturbs me,鈥 Councilwoman Maile David, who represents Volcano, Kau and part of Kona, said of being labeled as uncaring. 鈥淲e are not bad people. We are just trying to find a solution.鈥

Hawaii County is moving toward joining other jurisdictions in regulating short-term rentals. Maui voters, for example, passed a charter amendment that would impose fines of up to聽 $20,000 for running a vacation rental without a permit.

But the Big Island’s bill does not seek to cap units like other counties have done.

Maui County permits up to 416 short-term rentals, while the City and County of Honolulu is not allowing any more nonconforming units to the 775 that existed two years ago, officials said.

By comparison, the Kilauea eruption has destroyed 400 short-term rentals in Puna alone or about half of the district鈥檚 inventory, according to O鈥橦ara.

According to the Hawaii Island Visitors Bureau, 8,647 short-term rentals were advertised for rent in 2017, up 16.7 percent from the prior year.聽 and therefore pay no general exercise or transient accommodations taxes, according the bureau鈥檚 data.

A review of the main websites list average pricing of about $250 a night for a Big Island rental that ranges from a room to an entire house.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge economic opportunity 鈥 virtually turning your home into a business,鈥 said Livit Callentine, a senior Maui County planner whose work specializes in short-term rentals.

Some Maui landowners applied for short-term rental permits within a month of acquiring their property, which is why landowners there now must wait five years before becoming eligible to open a short-term rental, Callentine said.

鈥淲e found so many people buying properties and turning them into boutique hotels that had never even been to the island that we were inundated,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was horrible, horrible.鈥

Callentine suggested Big Island lawmakers also implement an ownership requirement if they want to preserve affordable-housing stocks. None is currently proposed.

鈥淪hort-term rentals incentivize investment for profit and exacerbate the high cost of home ownership by driving up the demand-to-cost ratio,鈥 Honaunau resident Charles Young wrote in testimony supporting the Big Island bill.

Young said short-term rentals are especially bad in residential neighborhoods because they strain infrastructure, noting they have caused South Kona鈥檚 Hookena Beach Park, where he works for a nonprofit, to become overcrowded beyond capacity.

But while some areas of Hawaii Island are overly busy, others are desperate for people.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 have a housing shortage in Puna,鈥 O鈥橦ara said of the empty homes and vacant lots she said are available throughout the district.

O鈥橦ara failed to convince a single colleague to oppose Bill 108 or, as a consolation, give her district five years before the law would take effect.

Puna short-term rental operator Sue Barrackman said she鈥檒l file a lawsuit 鈥 and expects others to do the same 鈥 against Hawaii County for an alleged illegal taking of her property rights should the proposed regulations become law. Jason Armstrong/Civil Beat

The measure still requires a second approval vote by a council majority, scheduled for Nov. 20, before it may be sent to Mayor Harry Kim for his expected signature into law.

If that happens, short-term rental owner Sue Barrackman warned lawmakers that she鈥檒l join a parade of property owners who will take Hawaii County to court for an illegal taking of their land-use rights.

“They are legislating us out of existence,鈥 she later told Civil Beat.

Barrackman said she runs a short-term rental in Puna鈥檚 Hawaiian Beaches neighborhood and has entered escrow on a nearby home she plans to use as her main dwelling.

鈥淚t鈥檚 my whole life,鈥 she told lawmakers.

Under the bill, short-term rental owners would have to apply for operating approval within 180 days of the bill鈥檚 effective date of April 1, 2019.

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