Much as Kauai folks like to imagine
themselves — and the island — as special and unique, what's
happening locally is often a microcosm of what's playing out in the
rest of the country.
Like the ongoing gentrification, and
transient vacation rental (TVR) expansion. A recent Associated Press article detailed the problem in tony Aspen, Colo., where rich
people are squeezing locals and workers right out of town.
The article prompted this email from a
southside reader:
Residents of the “neighborhood”
near the Whalers Cove have been talking about a story titled “Working Class Squeezed Out As Rich
Move In. ” The article explains how the rich moved in to Aspen,
driving up prices for everything, including lodging for locals
employed as service workers, who have then had to move away from
their town to find affordable lodging elsewhere. Sound familiar? Do
you have relatives or friends who commute from the west side to the
north shore to work in a restaurant, clean houses or make beds at a
timeshare? Do you know there are folks who drive from Hilo to Kona
daily to work at a hotel because they have no choice?
The Northshore and the Southshore are
already the “Aspens" of Kauai. If you think Local government
is interested in making things better for residents, think again. In
fact, local government, recently teamed up with 2 self styled, self
anointed, locally born community leaders, who seem to represent no
constituency but themselves, to up zone a residential neighborhood to
Visitor Destination Area. If passed, this would effectively destroy
one of the last near shore neighborhoods on the South shore. So
beware Hanalei. If they can’t figure a way to allow more illegal
visitor rentals, maybe they’ll just up zone you to help the
illegals.
It's a legitimate concern. When the
county designated Visitor Destination Areas around the island, the
intent was to limit tourism accommodations to specific areas. But as
legal and illegal TVRs steadily encroach onto residential and
agricultural lands, and the county toys with expanding VDAs into
established neighborhoods, the VDA designation is becoming pretty
much meaningless. And residents are feeling the squeeze.
Still, where there's political will,
there's a way. As the article reports:
The situation would be worse had Aspen
not gone to extraordinary lengths to try to avoid being hollowed out
by the departure of middle-class and working-class residents.
Financed by a 1.5 percent charge on real estate sales and a mandate
that any new projects include affordable housing, the city and county
run a 40-year-old program that allows people who have worked for one
year or longer in Aspen to rent, or buy, cheap residences.
Gee, what a concept.
Meanwhile, another Colorado town is
taking active steps to control its illegal vacation rentals. Boulder
has joined other cities in challenging Airbnb, which allows owners to
advertise TVRs whether they're legal or not. As an article on Circa reports, Boulder issued cease-and-desist notices to 20 property
owners accused of renting out space in their homes through the
service. San Francisco and Portland, meanwhile, require Airbnb to
collect transient occupancy taxes on TVRs in those cities.
And in New York, Airbnb turned over
data that allowed that state's Attorney General to file suit against
two apartment building owners engaged in illegal short-term rentals.
Some New York politicians and housing advocates also launched a
campaign against Airbnb, contending the service reduces the supply of
affordable rentals.
We've seen a similar reduction in
affordable rentals on Kauai as illegal TVRs have proliferated. Since
legal vacation rentals on Kauai are required to have a non-conforming
use TVR permit, perhaps the planning department and prosecutor's
office could start by asking Airbnb to require its Kauai advertisers
to display their permit as a condition for using the service.
Speaking of tourists, did anyone else
find it odd that Kauai Visitors Bureau spent $70,000 in taxpayer
money to help Sports Illustrated finance its annual swimsuit edition,
which features topless models on Kauai beaches, when KVB, the county
and Kauai folks hold such puritanical views about nude and topless
sunbathing? Guess the lure of all those salivating subscribers was just too hard to
resist.
Meanwhile, the frenzy of social media
activity — replete with fake names — that characterized the
anti-GMO movement on Kauai (and has since largely disappeared) is SOP among antis. I noticed the Institute for Responsible Technology,
which bills itself as “the most comprehensive source of GMO health
risk information on the web,” is “recruiting 5000 digitally
savvy volunteers willing to share our content and calls to action via
social tools. You will be invited to join a private Facebook group,
receive "insiders briefings," and participate in regular
action alerts.” And presto, all of a sudden it seems like the
“majority” is on the anti side, when in reality, it's long-distance smoke and
mirrors.
And finally, it was interesting to read
Mark Jeffers' letter to the editor today, where he maintains that
religious leaders should be on the GMO/pesticide Joint Fact-Finding
Group because “every religion teaches of the cyclic nature of all
life on our planet” while “the science of GMO agro-chemical
agriculture attempts to freeze our circle of life and control the
outcome for the profits of the individuals and corporations that are
involved.” He went on to write:
I believe the people on Kauai and
throughout Hawaii and the world are refuting the GMO science because
it is attempting to freeze the basic circle of life for gain at the
cost of our humanity.
It made me recall a comment that Dr.
Diane Ragone, an NTBG researcher who has been instrumental in
founding the Breadfruit Institute, left on a Facebook post of mine:
Joan – I appreciate your writings on
this subject, but please do not conflate “Agricultural
Biotechnology” with “Genetic Engineering or GMOs.” Yes, it does
include that but also so much more, such as:
Understanding, characterizing and
managing genetic resources; genomics; molecular markers;
marker-assisted breeding; measuring and conserving genetic diversity;
genotype verification; breeding and reproducing ornamentals, crops
and trees; cell and tissue culture and micropropagation; in vitro
selection; breeding and reproducing livestock and fish; artificial
insemination and multiple ovulation/embryo transfer. chromosome-set
manipulation and sex reversal in fish; other biotechnologies;
diagnostics and epidemiology; vaccine development, and animal
nutrition (like probiotics).
Seems like a lot of that is life-giving and life-preserving, rather than life-freezing. Like all the native plants
that have been saved from extinction through micropropagation
techniques at Lyon Arboretum, which has absolutely nothing to do with "corporate profits.”
But then, that's one of the big problems with the anti-GMO movement. It's rejecting all agricultural biotech due to its obsession with Monsanto and Roundup Ready corn. And most of its adherents don't even have a clue about the bigger picture.
22 comments:
If other places can control TVRs what's wrong with Kauai?
What's the bigger picture? I suspect it's end local ways like hunting, fishing, and farming so people can build their Hawaiian palaces. The same people supporting the antis don't even realize that they are attacking their own culture.
One correction in your statement "Since legal vacation rentals on Kauai are required to have a non-conforming use TVR permit" ... only those TVRs outside the VDA are required to have permits. Vacation renting is a permitted use within the VDA.
Kauai needs to practice truth in advertising and inform AT THE TIME OF BOOKING NOT ARRIVAL that the unit you are interested in is in a tsunami zone.
Thanks for clarifying that 11:11 a.m.
What do the tourists staying in the vacation rentals in tsunami zone do when the siren goes off?
run for da hills!
"Like the ongoing gentrification, and transient vacation rental (TVR) expansion. A recent Associated Press article detailed the problem in tony Aspen, Colo., where rich people are squeezing locals and workers right out of town. "
That article should be a wakeup call for Kauai. The tourism industry trashing of desirable areas like Aspen has been documented in detail by Hal Rothman in his book, Devil's Bargains: Tourism in the Twentieth-Century American West. It should be required reading for every resident, tourism industry worker and politician on Kauai -- the island is sliding headlong down the same slippery road.
Maybe the answer is to allow every resident to operate a B & B where you have to live in the same house as your guests. This would provide jobs and keep the tourist dollars here on Kauai instead of going to corporate coffers in another state or country.
TVRs located within VDAs are where theyre supposed to be. TVRs, B&Bs. Homestays, whatever you prefer to call them, outside the VDA are in violation and should be shut down or disallowed; except those who were made legal by an overly generous county several years back. Bottom line; zoning is in place for good reason; otherwise you might have a slaughterhouse as a neighbor. Do what you do in the proper zone and its all good!
Aspen was a ghost town before the ski and tourist industry arrived. All locals there have only arrived from some where else in the last 50 years.
Perhaps it is time to expand the VDA areas ? My home is surrounded by vacation rentals yet I can not have one. Times change and the visitors sure like them .
Perhaps it is time to enforce the VDA, who gives a fuck if visitors want to vacation in our neighborhoods, there are no places for the kids who were born and raised here to live. People need places to live in a community, visitors cannot have the whole island.
@7:31 AM - Amen!
Who decides where VDA zones are located ? Enforcement is not going to happen and you know it.
The entire Waikiki is in a tsunami zone. The reality is our economy does not support the prices of homes beachfront or close to the beach, which is why owner occupants who use a B&B to offset the cost of these homes is such a great concept that should be explored with open eyes. It is a bigger problem then not allowing the visitors to stay there, the question is how to we educate ourselves to be able to be the ones to afford these homes. Its a world economy and thats who we are competing with. Just because you can't vacation rent a house in Heana don't be convinced that you are opening more affordable housing up. The reality is over a period of time all you are doing is making these areas more exclusive for the next level of wealth.
5:59.
Here's the solution to your problem. Instead of moving the VDA to you, why don't you do the people who actually live in your neighborhood a big favor and move to a VDA?
10:23 you are missing the point I am surrounded by TVR's I have lived here for over 40 years. Why should they be allowed to operate illegally ?....thus since 90 percent of my street are TVR"s would not it make more sense to just change the street to a VDA zone ? It's called solving a problem .
Why pick on the TVRs .... lot's of people run commercial operations out of there houses ?
State law required the counties to set up the VDA's. There are big expensive houses operating as vacation rentals that will never be long term housing, but there are more vacation rentals that were always homes for residents and once again should be.Either way, commerce turns the community into a commodity.
6:23
Are you sure your neighbors' TVRs are illegal? If they have TVR signs they are legal because the county did not enforce the code back in the day and (diss) solved the problem by offering amnesty to the illegals - much to the dismay of law abiding residents. If they don't have signs, assume they are illegal, in which case as an outraged resident, you should call the authorities and demand they be shut down!
4:03 opines that Aspen was a ghost town before ski and tourism arrived. Define ghost town. Define what Aspen is today. Give me the ghost towns of Lahaina, Kailua Kona, Kailua, Oahu or Hanalei, anyday.
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