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Chairman Dennis Lin <br /> Windward Planning Commission <br /> County of Hawai'i <br /> 25 Aupuni St. <br /> Unit 1502 <br /> Hilo, HI 96720 <br /> Subject: Concerns and Recommendations Regarding Bill 121 <br /> Aloha Chairman Lin and Windward Planning Commission Members, <br /> Thank you for your public service and for considering the viewpoints and concerns shared by <br /> the community regarding Bill 121. <br /> While I appreciate the hard work of the Council members who drafted the bill, and the stated <br /> intent of the bill, I have deep concerns that the proposed legislation fails to consider how it will <br /> impact the economic well-being of Big Island residents in practice. <br /> Recommendation #1: Press pause and conduct an impact study <br /> Tourism is Hawaii's principal industry and legislation that limits the ability of residents to <br /> participate in this economy deserves a nuanced approach that acknowledges and equitably <br /> accounts for the unique circumstances that exist across diverse regions of our island. Even well- <br /> intentioned legislation can have far-reaching unintended consequences. This would also give <br /> affected communities an opportunity to provide meaningful input proactively rather than <br /> reactively. <br /> Recommendation #2: Maintain the present definition of short term /transient as thirty <br /> consecutive days or less <br /> Owners who rent their homes legally for 31 days or more have a vested right to continue this <br /> existing use. Changing the definition to 180 days would require creating an avenue for existing <br /> rentals to apply for nonconforming use certification. Instead of creating additional administration <br /> for an already complex and cumbersome set of provisions I support upholding the present <br /> definition of short-term/transient to be a rental period of thirty consecutive days or less. <br /> Recommendation #3: Remove restrictions about where hosts can live and where guests <br /> can stay <br /> Hosts rely on rental income for their livelihood—they use it to pay their rent, mortgage, <br /> medical bills, an empty nester may have college tuition to cover—any number of financial <br /> hardships could give a host cause to move into a secondary dwelling in order to rent out the <br /> primary home. Regulating which permissible residential dwelling can be occupied by a host <br />