**Rule Change Intended to Get Ahead of Potential Lawsuit, Comes Amid Likely State Legislation**

*By Zach Hagadone, Reader Staff*

Changes to Sandpoint’s ordinance regulating short-term rentals (STRs) will move forward, after members of the Planning and Zoning Commission voted on December 16 to recommend their approval by the City Council.

The commission first considered the changes at its November 18 meeting but deferred a recommendation until city staff could craft a legally defensible definition for “neighborhood integrity,” as well as address parking requirements for short-term rentals.

Planning and Community Development Director Jason Welker and Planner Bill Dean returned on December 16 with three central changes to the ordinance, as initially presented in November.

If approved by the council, “neighborhood integrity” would be defined as:

*“The condition in which residential areas function in a manner consistent with their intended character and density, such that short-term rental activities do not generate impacts such as noise, traffic, parking congestion, or public nuisance, beyond those normally associated with lawful long-term residential use.”*

Welker said he believed this definition is “very much in line” with what the state would consider a valid description of “neighborhood integrity,” which will be critical as the 2026 Legislature gavels into session in January.

“We are in an environment in which the state legislature has, for two years in a row now, contemplated changes to state code that would further strip cities’ ability to regulate short-term rentals,” Welker explained. “But the reality of the existing state law on short-term rental regulations is that our city code is in violation of state law as it is currently written.”

State law added in 2017 and amended in 2018 stipulates, in part:

*“Neither a county nor a city may enact or enforce any ordinance that has the express or practical effect of prohibiting short-term rentals or vacation rentals in the county or city.”*

Cities can, however, regulate STRs to protect “neighborhood integrity” and to ensure health and safety.

The legal question centers on Sandpoint’s current cap of 35 non-owner occupied STRs within residential zones. There are an estimated 170 licensed owner-occupied STRs throughout the city, which operate under no such cap.

Fears that the city of Sandpoint may face legal consequences for its cap on non-owner occupied STRs arose in August, when a representative from the Airbnb-backed Idaho Vacation Rental Alliance spoke before a state-level housing committee meeting in Sandpoint. She cited a court ruling that struck down a similar cap on STRs in Lava Hot Springs, arguing that the limitation represented a functional prohibition—an interpretation that Sandpoint City Attorney Zach Jones echoed December 16 before the Planning and Zoning Commission.

“My thought on that is that the 36th applicant is prohibited from having a short-term rental, and whether you make that number 500, the 501st applicant is prohibited from having a short-term rental,” Jones said, later adding, “Regulations can amount to a prohibition.”

Meanwhile, Welker told Planning and Zoning commissioners that not only was the city “put on notice” that it would be sued if the STR cap remained in place, but the Airbnb lobby group has already drafted a bill for the 2026 legislative session. This proposed bill would further amend state code by limiting “neighborhood integrity” to include requirements such as smoke alarms, CO2 detectors, fire extinguishers, and occupancy limits under the International Building Code.

“That’s it,” Welker said, adding that the draft legislation states STRs can be governed by “no greater restrictions” than any other dwelling units, nor can they be subject to any special licensing or permitting standards.

The amended ordinance, as presented on December 16, lifts the cap while defining “neighborhood integrity.” It also carves out a category of “high-occupancy STRs,” which advertise for 11 or more guests. Operators of those properties would be required to undertake all the noticing and hearing requirements of a conditional use permit (CUP)—though not required to obtain a CUP—including meeting specific standards related to performance and neighborhood impacts.

Currently, there are 13 such properties operating in Sandpoint that could be considered “high-occupancy” under the proposed ordinance changes.

Regarding parking, the amended ordinance would require one off-street parking space where five or fewer guests are accommodated, and two spaces for six or more guests. The high-occupancy STR parking requirements would be established by the Planning and Zoning Commission as part of the condition of approval.

“We are absolutely not deregulating short-term rentals. [We] would have the strongest STR ordinance in the state of Idaho and one that’s defensible under state law,” Welker said of the proposed amended ordinance.

During deliberations, Commissioner Scott Torpey expressed concern that if the Airbnb lobby’s bill passes through the Legislature, it could harm the city’s ability to collect the 14% lodging tax.

Welker clarified that the city collects that revenue from short-term rental platforms like Airbnb, not individual registrations.

“There’s a lot of faith we put in Airbnb,” he said, adding that STR companies like Airbnb, Vrbo, and others are working to require that every STR operating outside of their platform has to register with the state tax commission, which would collect taxes directly from owner-operators.

“They’re trying to make more red tape to make it less appealing for STR owners to operate outside of the Airbnb platform,” Welker said, later adding, “There is no end to their greed and their desire to deregulate.”

“Idaho is being used as a test case right now. This effort’s not happening in any other state,” he continued. “They view the Idaho Legislature as the most conservative and private property-oriented legislature in the states, so they’re seeing if they can get complete and total annihilation of short-term rental regulations in Idaho, then they’ll move on to all the other states.”

Though commissioners were unanimous in recommending approval of the amended ordinance to City Council, some voted with a measure of trepidation.

“This feels super scary, I would argue. I have no idea what this is going to do to neighborhoods, communities—maybe nothing, maybe the ‘market will figure it out,’” said Commissioner Grant Simmons. “[T]his could have some seriously unintended consequences, and I don’t know what to do about it, because we have to fit the ordinance inside the law.”

“I know it’s clichéd—the hands-are-tied kind of thing—but I think this does seem pretty black-and-white in terms of what the state code says, the recent case, legal counsel, the legal recommendation,” added Commissioner Reid Weber. “I think it would be hard for me to say ‘let’s go to battle with the state of Idaho’ as a Planning and Zoning commissioner.”
https://sandpointreader.com/sandpoint-pz-recommends-approval-of-amended-short-term-rental-ordinance/

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