• @RegalPotoo
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    2064 months ago

    You don’t need to ban them, just make them meet the same regulations on safety and zoning that regular hotels have to

    • @[email protected]
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      984 months ago

      I agree. A lot of the trouble that Airbnb causes can be mitigated with simple regulations that we already have in place. Additionally, we should recognize that Airbnb is currently filling a void in the market that hotels aren’t currently filling. There are times when people want to rent a place to stay for a full week or a month and also not have to pay to eat out every night. Airbnb allows you to rent a place that’s generally cheaper for longer stays and also provides a basic kitchen including cookware and dishes. Hotels just don’t have that unless you pay a premium. The only other thing they offer, which I’m on the fence about, is the ability to rent a place in close proximity or directly in a specific neighborhood or town as opposed to whatever area has a hotel to host tourists. On the one hand, that’s super nice for exploring cities and doing non-touristy things. On the other hand, residents deserve some separation from tourists especially since they don’t all behave. If hotels can find a way to fill these gaps, then I’d be ok with banning Airbnb. But we can also just regulate Airbnb 🤷

      • @[email protected]
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        274 months ago

        I feel like several advantages of Airbnb comes specifically from the lack of regulation. I’m speculating, but I imagine installing kitchens and maintaining them costs quite a lot as a hotel, with probably stricter and more expensive regulations compared to an Airbnb. I wouldn’t be surprised if Airbnbs were regulated similarly to hotels, that they’d be priced higher due to all the costs. It doesn’t make sense to me that a hotel, with 10s or hundreds of units, where not all units have to be rented out at once, is more expensive than a single property home where the whole unit must be rented out at once, and it takes up a bigger space. not to mention the inefficiency of repairs, and cleaning.

        • @[email protected]
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          204 months ago

          You might be right on the potential cost, but aren’t all Residence Inns basically this? I don’t think they cost that much more than other hotels.

        • Overzeetop
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          94 months ago

          It’s not the regulations, generally. Hotels are simply more cost effective for corporate management and ROI. If you want to make 20-25% a year you maximize units and minimize land expense and labor to manage. That it costs $10-30M is not a barrier to entry for a large corporation. AirBnB is less profitable but has substantially lower barriers to entry, especially if you lie about owner occupied status (which nearly all do when starting it).

          The regulatory angle only really gets put in play because the land is cheaper due to improper zoning (residential is less expensive than commercial) and if the owners are dodging taxes.

          • @[email protected]
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            24 months ago

            Putting up private rooms/homes for short term vacation rentals is nothing new and has been a thing since long before Airbnb. They have the same regulations as any private lease, which differ from commercial regulations for the same reason why your parents house doesn’t have lit exit signs and wheelchair ramps.

      • TWeaK
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        144 months ago

        I used to work away a lot, an airbnb was always a considered option - even when my meals were paid for. Sometimes you want to have a place to chill at for the week, not just a room.

        Saying that though I generally didn’t use airbnb for this, booking.com often has holiday lets as well - or better yet go directly to the owner’s website.

        • @Donkter
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          94 months ago

          Air BNB also exposed another aspect of the market as they can be so damn cheap, for a house to stay in! It’s clear there’s something scammy going on when the best option for me and my friends visiting New York was to rent an Air BNB loft for two weeks instead of a hotel.

      • @Drivebyhaiku
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        44 months ago

        I think the convenience and the swollen price tag of Airbnb offers particular issue. In my mind Airbnb exploits an issue with a lack of landlords not offering leases with full year of commitment requirements. Nobody is forcing a landlord to set a minimum year of occupancy, that’s just the culture we have. That additional markup for having a short term rental is what incentivizes the market to pledge houses towards people who want to travel on a budget.

        When I was living in Japan it was fairly normal to find short term rentals that were basically just regular rentals. You weren’t charged hotel prices for them, they cost the same as every other rental just you basically gave them a ballpark for how long you intended to stay as a courtesy to them or gave your month’s moving notice as needed. If you wanted to just keep staying there as a regular renter that was normal too. There were even small businesses that served as convenient rental realtors who smoothed the process between owners and renter so you could set things up by phone or email to take the key and possession of the apartment.

        Airbnb isn’t the only thing disruptive to the housing supply… It’s in part our entire culture of assuming a difference between short and long term renters and gouging short term renters because we assume that a low income person who is a short term leaser is going to ruin the places they live due to class prejudge. Long term lease requirements lock people living paycheck to paycheck down into situations that subject them to abusive landlords and the lack of flexibility means additional stress and impairment of freedom to move when something is desperately not working.

        • @Katana314
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          14 months ago

          I feel like Japan would have an extremely different level of risk assessment - determining whether a temporary tenant is going to kick down the walls, smoke drugs, break a window, leave the place a mess, and have absolutely no credit to pay back for damages.

          • @Drivebyhaiku
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            14 months ago

            There is a different culture in regards to looking after shared property but it’s still not a full proof situation for them. But it’s not like those things don’t happen with Airbnb clientele, the resolution is just handled by their internal team instead of the landlord. You could very well still end up holding the bag for damages.

    • @[email protected]
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      494 months ago

      Another way you could handle that is that any property you own after your 1st or 2nd, automatically attracts commercial property tax rates.

      That should not disallow private individual to rent a spare room, or holiday home, but it will kill off the investment businesses that specialise running airbnb syndicates.

      Additionally, if a property has not had a full time occupant for at least 9 of the 12 months in a year, it is subject to a wealth tax based on its value.

      That should deal with the investment firms that just sit on massive stocks of empty homes and business properties, feeding off the increasing prices they are creating themselves, while adding no value and offering no service.

      • @[email protected]
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        34 months ago

        Taxing the owners will just cause the prices to go up to compensate, unless the tax is a very significant burden. Short-term rentals are way more expensive than long-term leases, and so they are much more profitable. A landlord can make three times as much money on airbnb as they would make on a yearly lease.

        • @Glytch
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          204 months ago

          Yes, but when prices for short term leases are higher than the equivalent hotel stay, Airbnb landlords will lose money and potentially have to sell at a loss to someone who’ll actually live there.

    • @EdibleFriend
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      284 months ago

      Also kick the CEO and everybody in his general vicinity in the nuts. This should be law.

    • @[email protected]
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      144 months ago

      Everyone who says “ban them” seems like they have never left the US. In Europe and Latin America, there are a ton of other websites that locals use for the same thing. Before the web, you would call up a few places listed in a guidebook and rent it over the phone.

      I dislike Airbnb because it’s expensive. The concept of “renting a room” in a vacation area will never go away. But the idea of $100 cleaning fees, when they just change the sheets and wipe down surfaces (30 minutes total) is dumb.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 months ago

        We’re no strangers to it in the US as well, but what AirBnB has allowed is an industry of landlords that have strangled the housing stock in a number of places. It’s not the people renting a room in their house that are the issue, it’s the people buying apartments and houses specifically as rental property. I remember seeing a photo of LA that had AirBnB properties marked, and it was estimated at around 45% of all housing as being short-term-only rentals.

        I live in a condo complex of duplexes in a summer vacation spot that has a limit on the number of units that can be rented out specifically to avoid this kind of problem - they want affordable housing for people who are actually living here, and not properties that are going to sit empty 8 months of the year. They don’t care if you rent out a single room or something, but we have a lady who owns a building who doesn’t even live in the same state. She has to drive like 4 hours to get here.

        • @[email protected]
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          14 months ago

          LA is definitely not 45% short term rentals. There are 13 million people living in LA. Where do you think they’re all staying?

    • @[email protected]
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      34 months ago

      Just ban them, they are no reason to exist in housing crisis. That or the owner must live at that address with no other addresses or leins on property

    • Neuromancer
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      14 months ago

      I am not opposed to people renting a room through air bnb. It’s the whole house as a business model I don’t like.

      I rent my spare room on a different service to traveling nurses. It works well for both of us but it’s not a business.

      • @CascadianGiraffe
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        14 months ago

        Traveling nurses?

        I’m imagining little old ladies wandering from village to village but I’m certain there’s a more logical meaning?

        • @iggames
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          54 months ago

          Hospitals will hire some staff on a temporary basis (e.g. 3-6 month contracts) to fill gaps in their staffing during times of high demand. The idea is that experienced and flexible healthcare workers (whose living situations allow it) can “travel” by working 3-6 month contracts around the country. These contracts will often pay quite a bit more than permanent staff, and it’s especially desirable for staff from states who don’t pay as well (e.g. Florida) to work someplace that pays much better (e.g. California).

          You will often hear of it in the context of nurses, but I’ve run into radiology techs, social workers, and all sorts of other staff who were traveling on contracts.

          In contrast to your image, I find that travelers tend to skew younger (since they generally have fewer commitments keeping them in one place). However, I’ve also seen couples who travel together (both in healthcare), and facilities will often accommodate this by hiring both and scheduling them to work same shifts so they can carpool. I’ve also seen empty-nester couples travel with an RV.

          Anyway, these travel nurses would need places to stay for 3-6 months at a time, hence renting a room to them.

        • Neuromancer
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          04 months ago

          They go from hospital to hospital to fill in shortages vacations etc. they need furnished temporary housing normally for 90 days. Since I travel often, it leave someone at the house and they tend to clean and quiet. It’s mutually beneficial.

          I give them access the whole house. They get a room.

          Most places charges what I charge and there are four to a room. It’s insane.

  • @iAvicenna
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    1884 months ago

    what about not allowing companies to buy hundreds of houses as rental property?

    • @Wrench
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      1224 months ago

      It’s not just companies. Individuals are also chain buying places. Establish income from airbnb, leverage for their next purchase.

      My real estate agent was buying his 3rd airbnb while I was looking 2 years ago. Dude was in his late 20s.

      I’m hoping the house of cards comes crumbling down. Been dealing with housing insecurity as my landlord terminated our lease.

      • Neuromancer
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        344 months ago

        I’ve seen on Airbnb people who own 50+ properties.

        I used air bnb and fees times and found it more expensive and a hassle compared to a hotel.

        250 dollar cleaning fee but you want me to take out all the trash, was the sheets, sweep, mop etc. no thank you

        • @The_v
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          4 months ago

          I priced out an air bnb versus one of the nicer extended stay places. The ones that are larger and nicer than the apartments I have lived in.

          Guess what came in at 1/3 less cost, had maid service, and a free breakfast.

          I am all for banning Air BNB flat out unless the owner is living in the building. I am okay with a person buying a house and then renting out rooms or converting a basement to an apartment to lend out. It doesn’t remove available housing inventory from market to sit empty most of the year.

          • Neuromancer
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            44 months ago

            I am all for banning Air BNB flat out unless the owner is living in the building. I am okay with a person buying a house and then renting out rooms or converting a basement to an apartment to lend out. It doesn’t remove available housing inventory from market to sit empty most of the year.

            That’s where I stand. Also helps a young person afford a home by renting a room.

            I’ve been watching the Oregon coast. I’ve seen a lot of air bnb for sale. Seems like the market is dropping on them.

      • @willis936
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        184 months ago

        I remember this scene in The Big Short. Steve Carell goes to a strip club.

        • @[email protected]
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          54 months ago

          “There’s a bubble! It’s time to call bullshit.”

          “Bullshit on what?”

          “Every fucking thing.”

      • @[email protected]
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        134 months ago

        While I do agree with your point, individuals aren’t buying hundreds or thousands of properties. It’s corporations buying up a limited resource that are driving up the prices, not I-own-three-houses landlords.

        • @Misconduct
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          524 months ago

          Nah, I’m gonna go ahead and still be mad at both despite them being different degrees of bullshit. Thanks.

          • @duffman
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            14 months ago

            What about two houses? That you plan to pass on to your children?

        • @[email protected]
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          434 months ago

          An individual landlord isn’t buying hundreds of properties, but hundreds of individual landlords (all saying “it’s not my fault, I only own three houses!”) are buying hundreds of properties.

          Even if each individual landlord is a good person who’s going to heaven, they still make the housing market worse for everyone else. Their interests are directly opposed to working class people.

          • @PriorityMotif
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            -64 months ago

            There is demand for houses for rent by private landlords. Many people don’t want to rent in a multi unit from a large company, especially in lower income areas. Buying isn’t really a good option short term, especially in lower income areas, as houses don’t appreciate in those areas as much as in higher cost of living areas. If you’re planning on living somewhere for only a few years, then it doesn’t make sense to buy a house.

            • @[email protected]
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              114 months ago

              In the current system, what you’re saying is true. However, if we think of a system where each person can only own one or two houses by law, and houses are therefore much cheaper, buying for a short time wouldn’t be as bad. Potentially there could be a couple of houses owned by each city council to rent out in the short term for people who don’t want to buy.

              If we want to be radical (which I do), make housing a right and guarantee it for every citizen. Abolish capitalism and the profit motive for owning multiple houses. Whole system’s fucked as it is right now.

              • @PriorityMotif
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                -44 months ago

                You will still have costs associated with owning a house such as maintenance and repairs. If you buy a house and then have to put a roof/furnace/ major repair then you lost money if you only own the house for a few years.

                • @hark
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                  4 months ago

                  I had a new furnace put in last year and the cost was less than a month’s rent. Granted, I “knew a guy” but still, the quotes I got from others were two months of rent or less and you’re not going to replace a furnace every year or anything close to that. I’m not renting btw, this was for my own house. I don’t like the idea of being a landlord.

                • @[email protected]
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                  24 months ago

                  Again, I agree with you in the current system - assuming you have a landlord who upholds their end of the bargain and does maintenance. In my ideal world though, you’d just hit up your neighbours and they’d help you fix the problem because they know you’ll be there for them when they need it and because money is obsolete.

        • BlanketsWithSmallpox
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          14 months ago

          But setting policies to help renters in need without hurting landlords is complicated. Landlords aren’t a homogenous group of faceless corporations. In fact, fewer than one-fifth of rental properties are owned by for-profit businesses of any kind. Most rental properties – about seven-in-ten – are owned by individuals, who typically own just one or two properties, according to 2018 census data. And landlords have complained about being unable to meet their obligations, such as mortgage payments, property taxes and repair bills, because of a falloff in rent payments.

          https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2021/08/02/as-national-eviction-ban-expires-a-look-at-who-rents-and-who-owns-in-the-u-s/

          • @Wrench
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            54 months ago

            I’m not disagreeing, but 2018 census data may not be relevant anymore. There has been an absolute feeding frenzy since the lockdown. The landscape has definitely changed.

              • @Wrench
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                54 months ago

                Outdated data is irrelevant. 2018 was before the housing shortage, before wealthy hedge funds started buying up real estate en masse, before real estate corps employed AI to buy real estate, before airbnbs became egregious to the point of legislation like above.

                Quality and relevancy of data is important. You would roll your eyes at anyone citing 1920s census figures. Yes, that’s a dramatic exaggeration, but it makes the point.

                A lot has changed in real estate in the last 5 years. That’s the entire basis of the housing crisis discussion as a whole.

                • BlanketsWithSmallpox
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                  4 months ago

                  … Unlike every other housing bubble both local or worldwide that happens every 15 years or so?

                  https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real-estate_bubble

                  E:

                  Quality and relevancy of data is important. You would roll your eyes at anyone citing 1920s census figures. Yes, that’s a dramatic exaggeration, but it makes the point…A lot has changed in real estate in the last 5 years.

                  … Wow.

      • @Potatos_are_not_friends
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        104 months ago

        Absolutely true.

        I work in a highly paid industry and during the 2010-2015, nearly everybody was investing in real estate. Most of the lunchroom talks were about finding properties, showing off our house investments, and speculating if an area would boom. There were startups catered to folks like us to just give them money and they’ll handle the cleaning and maintenance.

        Then we got distracted by Bitcoin and all other weird things.

    • HobbitFoot
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      124 months ago

      Focusing on AirBnB is better in my opinion because of the difference between the two.

      A company buying a home to rent still has to rent the property, so they aren’t removing the housing supply. In contrast, a person or corporation buying a home to use as an AirBnB is removing housing from the market.

      • @LemmyKnowsBest
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        4 months ago

        Companies should not own houses. Residents of houses should own their own houses.

        Nobody should own someone else’s house. A roof over one’s head is a basic human right. Not an extortionate investment.

        The problem with companies owning hundreds of houses is that they hire property management companies to manage these houses that were built by the lowest bidders and everybody blames each other when something needs to be maintained and the maintenance never gets done and the people living in the houses suffer because they are paying their hard-earned money to these companies while their shoddily-built houses are falling apart.

        remember there are real actual humans hiding behind the facade of these corporations, greedy extortionate millionaires & billionaires thriving on exponential dollars from poor people’s paychecks, and this needs to be stopped.

          • @[email protected]
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            Those should be co-ops/non market housing.

            And if the incentives for new co-ops to be made isn’t enough, it’s time for the government to finance/build/zone for new ones. If the government just fucking spams medium and high density housing in the form of co-ops, bans corps from owning housing, bans AirBnB, etc, it would very quickly fix the housing crisis.

      • @legion02
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        54 months ago

        I’m 5050 on this. At least the airbnb is making money for people (generally) instead of a massive Corp. I. Reality both suck but I think I’d rather a person benefit.

        • @Threadsdeadbaby
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          64 months ago

          I make a living cleaning short term vacation rentals. I also have no savings and cannot afford to buy a home. I’m almost 40 yrs old and never have I been in a position to consider purchasing a home. Rent is my life now :'(

        • HobbitFoot
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          14 months ago

          I feel like the harm to a community of removing housing is worse than someone in the top 10% having another investment vehicle.

          • @Adalast
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            34 months ago

            I can tell you that it is all harmful. My landleeches have acknowledged that the house we rent needed maintenance before we moved in and have done literally 0 of it in the last year, opting to instead use my wages to improve the other 24 properties they purchased in bulk from a retiring landleech. Then they have the audacity to attempt to illegally evict me and my pregnant wife when I start asserting my rights, and tell prospective landlords we are “problem tenants” who have paid every rent payment in full and on time for the entire lease.

            No, there needs to be mandatory, city/borough-wide rental associations that have the legal authority to hold landleeches accountable. It needs to be mandated at the federal level and it needs to have serious teeth.

    • @takeda
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      54 months ago

      What about doing both?

  • @[email protected]
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    Good. Sorry to every mom and pop who treated housing like an investment, but at least you still have the house. Hope they slash the market 90%. Hope everyone who’s been waiting for a decade gets a place to live. Hope opportunistic landlords choke and go bust when they can’t pay three mortgages on their tenants’ salaries anymore. Housing is a human right.

    • @Kittenstix
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      114 months ago

      It’s definitely not going to slash it 90% to do that you’d have to make moves to guarantee houses are always losing value, much in the same way cars do, so that you have a thriving used house market for people that can’t afford, or don’t care, to buy new.

      That means either implementing the construction of houses with materials that have a short life, or forcing houses to be torn down after, let’s say 50 years.

      I’d prefer just getting rid of ownership of property, but i dont know if we are ready for that as a society.

    • @[email protected]
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      -74 months ago

      90%? Ha!

      Opportunistic landlords? Those are the ones who are going to swoop in and buy everything if it drops 15%.

      Everyone waiting for a decade!? Everyone waiting that long who were ever going to own bought 3-4 years ago at record low sub 3% interest rates. That makes more of a difference in what you pay than the price of the house if you’re getting a mortgage, which is who you’re talking about here.

      • @[email protected]
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        That last part isn’t entirely true: some of us were “waiting” as in not currently making enough to buy, but working on it. I literally just started making enough to consider buying a home when COVID hit and the WFH movement took my plan, threw it down a flight of stairs, and pissed all over it.

        • @[email protected]
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          34 months ago

          Houses would have to go down by nearly half in order to make the total cost of the loan equal what it did with the record low rates during covid and the following year.

          A 300k house at today’s rates costs about the same over the loan as a 600k house at the record low rates, about 900k over the life of the loan, to paint a picture of how much rates effect your buying power. And everyone locked in to those rates will never sell, which is everyone. Why walk away from that loan. It makes more sense to rent out the house to pay the mortgage than to sell. I know that’s what I’d do, I’ll never walk away from this loan.

          So unfortunately, folks who missed those record low rates likely missed the bus, buying will still be possible but it will be much more of a slog, buying a shitty starter home and throwing tons of you’re money into mortgage payments that go mostly to interest.

          • @[email protected]
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            24 months ago

            Pretty much, just another thing that got added to my gigantic pile of “reasons to be extraordinarily depressed in perpetuity” over the last like decade now…

            Life is different for everyone, but for me it’s really amazing how it just only gets worse year after year.

            • @[email protected]
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              04 months ago

              Dang I’m sorry to hear that. I feel like I caught the last good wave. I learned to code when the bootcamps we’re booming and cheap and you could get a tech job anywhere easy. Worked my way up to senior engineer and got really good in time to avoid all the layoffs. Took my permanent remote silicone valley salary and moved to a small town and bought my first house on acres of forest right as lockdown hit full swing. Got locked into that sub 3%, got married and have a kid, wife doesn’t have to work, and my salary is very comfortable in this town which is nestled into stunning natural beauty, where the redwoods meet the California coast. It’s paradise.

              Maybe there’s abother boat coming.

          • @FarmTaco
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            14 months ago

            I locked in a sub 3, and this is basically in my opinion the only plan, I can never walk away from this mortgage, the only way Im not in the house is via renting it out, the difference in prices now and when i bought are almost comically high and its only been 4 years.

            • @[email protected]
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              24 months ago

              Yeah it makes zero sense to give up the loan. It’s the closest to a free loan any normal person can get. I refinanced even like 6 months after buying. The value of the house had gone up by like 100k, so I pulled out 50k, got a lower rate, and my monthly went DOWN. My wife was like, where’s the catch this can’t just be free money, and I’m like, actually it kind of is.

  • NutWrench
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    1204 months ago

    How about we ban companies like Blackstone from buying up all the auction homes, lightly flipping them and then putting them back on the market as overpriced rentals?

    They’re a big reason for our housing shortage.

    • @takeda
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      464 months ago

      Why not both? Airbnb severely increases prices, and properties bought by corporations do the same. I’m tired of not doing anything because "what about "

    • @buzz86us
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      124 months ago

      Yeah I’d like to still be able to afford a goddamn vacation.

        • @[email protected]
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          54 months ago

          Freaking crazy numbers. It’s been years since I’ve seen a hotel room for anywhere near $180. I dont’ use AirBnB often, but when I do it’s because they are dramatically cheaper than the hotels in the area.

          • @buzz86us
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            Try having to go to NYC at a few days notice ouch… Like all I could find was $150… I just rented a uhaul and used my gym membership… Just last year I could have been in a nice room in someone’s house for $40

            • @[email protected]
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              24 months ago

              Yeah. A few years ago I got a 3-bedroom apartment in Denver for something like $100/night. It was incredible.

              Now…I dunno. Haven’t done AirBnB in a while

            • 𝕱𝖎𝖗𝖊𝖜𝖎𝖙𝖈𝖍
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              14 months ago

              I highly doubt these prices. I live in Brooklyn and had to deal with a shit Airbnb next door to me. Their shitty closet was going for $400-$500 a night depending on the time of year. It was also absolutely miserable to live next to.

              Meanwhile hotels in the area are maybe $200 at the cheapest, not really sure where you’re seeing $150. In Manhattan proper they start at $300 minimum.

              • @buzz86us
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                14 months ago

                I was mostly in LIC or the Bronx… I tend to do Jersey city now. I rent a private room so I’m not being part of the problem.

          • @[email protected]
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            24 months ago

            Granted, the above is more of a general trend then a hard and fast rule. The city and area you live in will greatly effect the rates for both.

            At the end of the day I think it is quite clear that AirBnB is a net negative to society, and a huge one at that. So fuck em.

            • @[email protected]
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              84 months ago

              …which is weird, because at first AirBnB had a huge positive influence. Often times hotels had regional monopolies and individuals owned an extra condo… Like a match made in heaven the hotels got much-needed competition and people were able to do something more flexible than timeshare with their vacation/work/whatever condo

              The issue seems to be businesses that buy property to use for the exclusive purpose of AirBnB

    • @Octavio
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      94 months ago

      What about if we crowdfund a competitor to blackstone that rents out the houses at like a 20% discount to market rate and earmark a portion of rent collected each month for the tenants to have an equity stake in the property. Then more people would want to rent from us and eventually the vampires would lose interest. I wonder if something like that would be possible. Instead of legislating them out, we buy them out. But it does require a critical mass of people willing to set aside a bit of money that they don’t expect a market return on. But maybe if they thought of it more as charity.

      • @[email protected]
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        104 months ago

        Well, besides the fact that I imagine most people in the target audience would rather buy their first house than crowdfund discounted rental rates…

        Do you pinky swear that once you overtake Blackstone , the 150 billion dollar company, you’ll have the same intentions?

        • @Octavio
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          34 months ago

          That’s the flaw in the slaw, I guess. No matter how carefully you craft the by-laws, once it gets big enough, someone will figure out a way to hi-kack it to concentrate wealth.

        • @[email protected]
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          4 months ago

          Boromir: But it is a gift. A gift to the foes of Mordor. Why not use this Ring? Long has my father, the Steward of Gondor, kept the forces of Mordor at bay. By the blood of our people are your lands kept safe! Give Gondor the weapon of the enemy! Let us use it against him!”

          Strider: You cannot wield it. None of us can. The One Ring answers to Sauron alone. It has no other master."


          Trying to fight and compete with a system that thrives on greed using its own tools and rules requires the ruthless use of greed to compete, and greed has a way of warping ones’ heart to continue forever justifying itself until its host is left an empty husk, having made a barren wasteland of all they hoped to save.

          Capital knows its masters, and it will not be wielded by people who would subvert its influence.

        • @Octavio
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          34 months ago

          Damn it. Every good Idea I get, someone already thought of it.

          • @buddascrayon
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            4 months ago

            The sad fact is that it is actually a good idea that should be implemented more often but the banks have worked very hard (i.e. spent millions on propaganda and lawmaking) to sow distrust in credit unions.

          • @buddascrayon
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            24 months ago

            The difference is somewhat academic and not viable in America under that name since most Americans are fairly stupid and will think that a Building Society is a meeting group for architects.

    • @fidodo
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      44 months ago

      Any industry based on scarce resources or monopolies should be strictly regulated and given profit caps. Land is limited so corporations should not be able to monopolize that land for boundless profits.

    • darcy
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      224 months ago

      propertys have more rights than humans

    • @return2ozmaOP
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      14 months ago

      Is there a political Twitter channel?

      • @[email protected]
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        24 months ago

        I wouldn’t even know how to search for one. If you don’t have much following there, nobody will see it.

        There are definitely political sublemmies or whatever we call them. But they’re probably full of signals already.

        This is a little meme-like I guess. In the sense it’s a thing you look and then realize something or suddenly grok it.

        Maybe you mean like a “goofy political posters”. Sort of like political cartoons, but like photo plus comment format.

  • Queen HawlSera
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    464 months ago

    Now if only they would stop framing the dropping of home prices as a bad thing.

    Don’t attack the homeless, attack the lack of homes.

    • @dejected_warp_core
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      14 months ago

      Media has a strong monied bias. To be blunt: nobody is publishing or doing journalism for the “I don’t have a fixed address” and “I’m flat broke” audiences. You need money to get access to media, and everyone working there is gainfully employed, so it’s a safe bet.

      And that’s clear in this news story. The framing for this story is basically “you’re losing money and you may not even know it yet”. Declining real-estate “value” means that 2nd mortgage is going to be a lot smaller than you planned. Or maybe you’re now upside-down after installing that hot tub.

      • Queen HawlSera
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        24 months ago

        Yeah, but don’t the Gen Xers want us Millenials out of their basements? I mean I’d love to, but I can’t exactly afford the nice luxurious cardboard boxes they have downtown.

        • @dejected_warp_core
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          4 months ago

          As a child-free Gen-Xer, I can say that I got the exact same sentiment from Boomer parents while broke and unemployed. I honestly think my peers are modeling the same monstrous nonsense from our parents without thinking first. This is especially frustrating as now I’m hearing “come visit” over and over, despite getting the boot so many years ago. I feel ya, and I’m sorry you’re going through this.

          That said I don’t wish this situation on you or anyone else younger than myself. You’re up against a whole generation that was neglected as a group, practically raised by TV, promised a world without rainforests and whales, a huge hole in the ozone layer, and all under the looming threat of global thermonuclear war. At the same time, MTV rebelled for us in only the most commercial way imaginable, and we forgot that was something we had to do for ourselves. The bar was on the goddamned floor and not nearly enough people tried to step over it. Fight Club was a call to at least take care of our mental health and we ignored it. We’re not well and, frankly, need to be put on notice.

          I also maintain that anyone in my age bracket spouting this dissonant “get outta my house” nonsense needs their head checked. We have systemic problems and need systemic answers; same as it ever was. Gen-X needs to out there, vote, and support their damn kids like they never got from their parents. /rant

  • @[email protected]
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    294 months ago

    If you think banning Airbnb is going to solve the housing crisis outside touristic spots, I think you might be in for a rude awakening.

    Gotta build more, specifically denser, and at a large scale. Probably lots of rentals with landlords not in it for profit, think Vienna-style.

    • Cosmonaut_Collin
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      304 months ago

      All landlords are in it for the profit. They should instead do more condominiums, so you can own the space you live in. We shouldn’t have to live the rest of our lives paying rent.

      • @[email protected]
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        134 months ago

        Government-owned apartments don’t need to have a profit-focus, and can instead have a service-focus.

        You’ll still be paying continuously for a condominium - there are plenty of things related to living in one of those that aren’t free. Having an ownership-focused model of housing and incentivizing as such comes with a whole host of undesirable problems as well, so it’s not strictly speaking a silver bullet. That being said, housing coops can under the right circumstances be a force for good.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 months ago

        True, but he means nationalized, so publicly owned, publicly funded.

        Not only is rent there seen as temporary ownership (same in Germany), with really strong protections but the rent itself is like $300-$400 euros a month, barely anything for a top tier apartment that’s basically a solarpunk megabuilding.

        I honestly think that’s preferable to paying mortgages for also for-profit banks and ‘climbing the ladder’.

        The lack of ownership as an option also prevents the accumulation of such wealth that someone can buy it all out and make it all worse again

        • Cosmonaut_Collin
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          34 months ago

          I didn’t even think about nationalized housing. Although I’m sure it will be lobbied against hard here in the US.

      • @[email protected]
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        34 months ago

        Most landlords. I was a landlord for a while because I was underwater on my mortgage, I had just gotten divorced, and I wanted to move closer to work. I rented the house out at a loss so I could afford an apartment.

      • @Harbinger01173430
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        -14 months ago

        So…instead of paying rent to the landlord, people will be paying a mortgage to the bank?

    • @[email protected]
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      44 months ago

      Except right now, we have enough housing for every person in the country. We just don’t have them filled because it’s not profitable. Lowering the incentives companies or individuals have for buying houses to keep them empty will ABSOLUTELY curb the rampant housing prices.

      • @[email protected]
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        34 months ago

        Buying houses to keep empty is mostly a land speculation-kind of deal, probably best solved by something like a Land Value-Tax.

        Back to the claim though, I’m highly skeptical that the U.S would have a huge surplus of houses in areas where there truly is demand for people to live, i.e. larger cities.

    • @Moghul
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      44 months ago

      Gotta build more, specifically denser, and at a large scale.

      This sounds like cyberpunk megabuildings

      • @[email protected]
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        94 months ago

        It’s more like lots of rowhouses and like 5-10 story apartment mixed-use apartment buildings - hardly a cyberpunk kind-of deal.

        An interesting thing is that megabuildings only make sense in the most extreme of circumstances, think Manhattan-levels of location desirability. After a while, adding more floors becomes exponentially more expensive because of the new engineering challenges. Hence it’s rarely worth it.

      • @[email protected]
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        54 months ago

        My hope is that it wouldn’t be as bad as one might think. Dense living arrangements are more profitable for cities and local businesses and can allow cities to focus on infrastructure improvement and welfare. A problem with the megabuildings could be if they are solely owned by megacorps, but hopefully people will start looking into housing cooperatives to reduce costs and put more power in the hands of tenants. It doesn’t have to be like we only build skyscrapers either, but imo we need to have more of a gradient in terms of building height depending on distance to the city center; different apartment building heights have their own benefits. This is just my dream, though.

    • @[email protected]
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      34 months ago

      This is an unpopular opinion especially with Americans. But, we are building houses for private ownership like it can be infinite but on a finite earth. This is inevitably rising the prices.

      With the Vienna model, people can afford a rent and we resolve the prive ownership issue.

  • @[email protected]
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    274 months ago

    Is this what responsible governments do? I would have figured that Airbnb and the gamblers investors in the housing market would have bribed lobbied hard against this.

    • Neuromancer
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      44 months ago

      They have but local governments report to the local people. Airbnb doesn’t drive the economy like people living in the homes.

  • @paddirn
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    4 months ago

    I don’t like AirBNB and still think they should be banned, but not sure that what the graphic is stating has really panned out in Palm Springs.

    According to Redfin, median Palm Springs home sale prices had appeared to drop by about $200k in Sept 2023 (to around $500k), but within two months they were right back close to where they had been before. They’re sitting at about +18.4% year-over-year for median home sale prices. Given that alot of the properties for sale still appear to be in the millions, I’m not sure that they’re representative of what we see in the rest of the country. There may be other data points out there that paint a different picture, that’s just the first thing I looked up.

    • @[email protected]
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      74 months ago

      Makes sense to me, AirBNB is just one piece of the puzzle, get rid of them and they’ll just sell their investments to a different group that’s driving up prices. You’ve gotta completely overhaul home ownership and the housing market such that it exists in order to make speculative investment no longer a thing if you want to actually solve the underlying problem.

    • @Chocrates
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      24 months ago

      Additionally if the housing market was in free fall that would impact the tax revenue of the city. Not saying we don’t want to do it, but there are going to be consequences.

      • @skydivekingair
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        14 months ago

        City taxes are typically part of the budget and property values determine how much you pay in relation to other properties in the city, not how much your house costs. Say the city budget is $1,000,000 and 100 houses in the city (total), and they’re all equal value. Each house pays $10,000 in property taxes regardless of the value being $100,000or $1,000,000 per house.

        Hyperbole and simplification done to make an easy explanation.

        • @Chocrates
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          14 months ago

          That is not true in at least the city I was in before. They set a tax rate percentage and you pay that percent of your home value as taxes.

          • @skydivekingair
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            14 months ago

            So when house prices more than doubled during COVID did their tax revenue increase or did they readjust the % to match the new values?

            • HACKthePRISONS
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              04 months ago

              there is usually an assessor that determines the assessed value, and that is the basis for property taxes.

              transfer taxes are another matter, as well as capital gains on homes that are not your primary residence.

              • @skydivekingair
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                14 months ago

                Yeah, and the assessed value is compared to the other assessed value of homes in the taxable area and that’s how they divide the tax revenue from the value of the house. So if a whole area is in feeefall and loses (or gains) 50% value equally then the taxes would be approximately the same. Every house dropping value and the city government isn’t going to just accept half the budget from property taxes that year, they just reassess and recalculate amounts owed.

    • @jimbo
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      4 months ago

      deleted by creator

  • @[email protected]
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    134 months ago

    I was recently in palm springs, and not only is it among the shittiest-vibe towns I’ve visited, with some of the worst restaurants I’ve been to anywhere in California, I saw a depressing, near windowless, one-story home with no yard for sale at $3M. Their market made absolutely zero sense, I feel like this was inevitable, especially after speculative building during the pandemic.

  • Neato
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    124 months ago

    Did sites like VRBO for vacation and large house rentals exist for AirBnb? I didn’t really book those at that point. While I agree airbnb should probably be replaced by hotels (like in the past) was there a way to rent a large living space for a group pre-airbnb?

    • ALoafOfBread
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      AirBNB used to be about just renting a room in your house out to people. Before it got big it wasn’t for being a multi-property short-term landord.

      Actually, vrbo was more like that - vrbo was around long before airbnb and was meant to be a way to help market your short term rental or like rent your vacation house out while you werent using it.

      The problem is they each fill a niche, the need for short term accommodation with privacy for a group, but its super easy to take advantage and start listing huge numbers of properties to make lots of money if youre a leech landlord - which is part of why we’re in such a bad situation now with the housing market.

      • @wreckedcarzz
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        24 months ago

        So like, limit the number of listings that one person and/or company can have (and for those with more than one listing, vet those more stringently)? This has always been a very “duh” solution; but they need to be forced to adopt the policy, as they dgaf since they are making monayyyy from it.

        • @decerian
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          54 months ago

          But then what’s to stop one bad owner from just making 15 different accounts for their 15 different properties?

          And from the users perspective, there’s reasons to prefer that all the properties under the same owner are tied to the same account. If bad reviews are happening it’s easier to see the pattern if all the properties on the account have bad reviews.

          Not that I don’t generally agree with you, I just think that it’s a complicated enough issue that just limiting the number of listings per person won’t totally solve.

          • @wreckedcarzz
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            34 months ago

            more stringent vetting

            Require a govt ID (and run that ID through a db to make sure it’s legit) for each host. Cross reference with who is the legal owner’s name on all properties; if company, base on the owner of company (avoids ‘I’ll just make 5 companies’ workaround). Even more basic stuff like ‘if more than 1 account is using the same bank account, flag for review’. This stuff isn’t hard, it’s just not in use currently.

    • Kbin_space_program
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      24 months ago

      Generally was a localized market thing.l as far as I am aware.

      Things like cottage towns or ski resorts would have local companies that managed places in that area, taking a cut, but also doing things like ensuring lack of unit damage between tenants, cleaning, going after Olympians after they spin up a $400 phone bill to their BF in France while staying in a unit to train. (She apologized profusely and immediately paid the bill.)

    • @Rolando
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      24 months ago

      was there a way to rent a large living space for a group pre-airbnb?

      Do a web search for “extended stay hotel” or “hotel suites”.

    • Willie
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      04 months ago

      You can get two hotel rooms if you have more people than fit into one room. You can rent bigger rooms from hotels too.

      When I was a kid in like… the 90s, we stayed in this hotel room that was like… 2 stories tall and had like… a living room and stuff. And it wasn’t even a touristy city. I don’t know what that kind of hotel room is called, but it was pretty sweet.

      I’m surprised more hotels haven’t realized that some folks want that larger rental experience and haven’t opened up more larger hotel rooms with kitchens and stuff. Perhaps it’s not as profitable. Or maybe hotels don’t want to hire someone to properly clean something like that, and hotels don’t get to force you to pay them to clean it after having you clean it yourself like Airbnbs do.

      • Neato
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        44 months ago

        Yeah, I’ve seen those but not ideal. We have a group that gets together at least yearly with about a dozen people. Beds are needed but general living space that can accommodate all of that as well. I’ve never seen that kind of thing in a hotel.

      • ares35
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        14 months ago

        a bit earlier than that, back when i was a kid… when we needed more space for more people for whatever was going on, it was always multiple rooms (adjoining, usually) at the holiday inn (in our town. only one with an indoor pool at the time) or at embassy suites (when we were in the cities).

  • @LavaPlanet
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    94 months ago

    Omg, best news story of the day. This brought me a shit ton of joy.