DALTX Real EstateDALTX Real EstateDALTX Real Estate
  • Home
  • Guest Post
  • Agents
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Advertise With Us
Reading: Plano Delays Decision on Short-Term Rentals, Considers Following Arlington Ordinance
Share
Font ResizerAa
DALTX Real EstateDALTX Real Estate
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Guest Post
  • Agents
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Advertise With Us
  • Home
  • Guest Post
  • Agents
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Advertise With Us
Follow US
© DALTX. All Rights Reserved.
DALTX Real Estate > David Schwarte > Plano Delays Decision on Short-Term Rentals, Considers Following Arlington Ordinance
David Schwarte

Plano Delays Decision on Short-Term Rentals, Considers Following Arlington Ordinance

6 Min Read
SHARE
Contents
Plano Tables Action on Short-Term RentalsArlington‘s Ordinance Regulates Short-Term Rentals
Plano-STR4-1024x726
This Luxury West condo is listed on Airbnb for $173 per night.

The Plano City Council last week delayed action on short-term rentals but heard from residents and the city’s neighborhood services director about plans to model an ordinance after the one adopted in Arlington. 

Short-term rentals dominated the news in Dallas during the summer months, but the debate cooled as the city entered its budget process. 

The Dallas City Plan Commission revisited the matter Thursday and set a special daylong public hearing for Dec. 8.

Some STR operators say they operate Airbnb and Vrbo homes responsibly, and the rentals provide an extra source of income. They impose their own rules such as a curfew and guest limit, and they register and pay fees to the city. 

STR opponents say the units are a nuisance. They’ve argued that STRs are operating as hotels and therefore ought to be in areas that are zoned as such, rather than in residential neighborhoods.

Plano Tables Action on Short-Term Rentals

During the Nov. 14 Plano City Council meeting, at around the 1:20 mark, elected officials announced they were going to table the item on STRs based on legal counsel, but they went forward with a public hearing. 

Thirteen speakers addressed the city council, all in support of zoning changes that would regulate or prohibit STRs in residential areas. Many also advocated for a third-party data collection service so the city would know where its STRs are and could enforce regulations and collect fees. 

Plano-STR4-1024x726
This Plano Airbnb rents for $65 a night.

Plano already has about 900 STRs, some of which are engaged in illegal activity, residents said. 

Director of Neighborhood Services Lori Schwarz said staff was directed in October to model an STR program similar to the one used in Arlington, develop a registration program, and initiate a zoning review of STRs. 

Under Plano’s proposed plan, STRs would be required to register with the city beginning in January. Application requirements include providing local contacts, floor plans with safety equipment, insurance, self-inspection, and sworn statements by the owners and operators. 

The city also would conduct inspections and file citations in Municipal Court with those that are non-compliant. Schwarz recommended that the city enter a contract with an STR monitoring service. 

“We’ve done a lot of investigation about what’s possible with the government regulation of these types of housing,” she said. “Most of them require some sort of monitoring contract.” 

Mayor John Muns said the council received additional information regarding STRs during an executive session, delaying council action on the matter. Schwarz said based on the new timeline, a recommendation for an implementation plan could be pushed back to spring 2023. 

Arlington‘s Ordinance Regulates Short-Term Rentals

Plano resident Catherine Parker pointed out four tenets of the Arlington model: 

  • Hire a third-party data collection firm to determine all the short-term rentals operating in the city.
  • Conduct town hall meetings and gather citizen input about short-term rentals in single-family neighborhoods.
  • Update the City of Plano’s zoning ordinance to clarify where short-term rentals can and cannot be.
  • Create a registration program to monitor STRs where they are permitted, and prohibit them in districts where they should not be allowed.

Attorney David Schwarte of the TX Neighborhood Coalition said the Plano City Council’s proposal, as it’s written now, could be interpreted as though it’s authorizing STRs in single-family residential neighborhoods. 

Plano-STR4-1024x726
This Plano Airbnb rents for $79 a night.

“If that was the intent or the effect of this proposal, then this is a proposed regulation that would amend de facto the zoning ordinance,” Schwarte said. “Such an action, even though it’s not labeled as a zoning change, would violate the provisions of the Texas Local Government Code. I think an objective reading of your current code shows that single-family residential neighborhoods are not places where short-term rentals are allowed. Short-term rentals are currently forbidden in all residential districts in Plano.”

Changes to the zoning code must first be heard by the Planning and Zoning Commission, Schwarte added. 

“I was involved from start to finish in the Arlington ordinance,” he said. “There’s a lot of work to be done if you really want to follow in our footsteps.” 

Plano-STR4-1024x726
Source: TX Neighborhood Coalition

Resident Steven Kiriakos encouraged the council to gather neighbor feedback before proceeding. 

“Please work with us, not against us,” he said. “We would love to work with you outside this forum if possible. We would love to follow the Arlington model and expedite the zoning, which would be a great use of taxpayer dollars. Subscribing to the host compliance data collection would be great.”

Major Migration? Dallas-Fort Worth Population Growth Tops Nation
A Closer Look at How Other Texas Cities Deal With Short-Term Rentals
Ground Is Officially Broken, So Check Out Renderings of One Rangers Way in Arlington
Board Member: Public Facility Corporation Projects Can Offer Public Benefit for Dallas
Report: Dallas-Fort Worth Has Less Than One Month of Housing Inventory
TAGGED:ArlingtonDallas City CouncilDallas Plan CommissionJohn MunsLori SchwarzPlano City Councilshort term rentals
Share This Article
Facebook Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article A Famed Ft. Worth Men’s Clothier Custom Built This Ridglea Home and It’s Haute
Next Article Home Inspector Thankful For Dangerous Finding
Popular News
Culture Gulch

Luxurious Tatum Brown New Build in Culture Gulch Shines With Staging From Cindy Musgrove

Enjoy A Happy Kind of Life in This Darling White Rock Home
Can a Disney Themed Home Be ‘Tastefully Decorated?’
5 Fabulous Open Houses Today and Tomorrow All Under $1 Million 
Ebby Halliday Companies Breaks Ground on Stand-Alone Prosper, Celina Office
about us

DaltxRealEstate.com is the largest real estate blog and the only one in North Texas.

Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact Us
  • Paid Guest Post Submission
  • Real Estate Glossary

Categories

  • Commercial Real Estate
  • Home Inspection
  • East Dallas
  • Monday Morning Millionaire

Get Involved

  • Advertise With Us
  • Write for Us: Submit Guest Post

Find Us on Socials

© DALTX. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?