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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2024-04-17 Bill 121 Harry M. Pritikin From: trustharrvCcbaloha.net To: LPCtestimonv Subject: ILL CONCEIVED NOTION Concerns Over Bill 121"s Impact on Local Economy and Housing Date: Wednesday,April 17,2024 1:22:02 PM Importance: High Chairperson Barbara Defranco Leeward Planning Commission County of Hawaii 25 Aupuni St. Unit 1502 Hilo, HI 96720 Aloha Chairperson Lin & Commission Members, My question is, who do the sponsors of this bill think it will help? Renters? That's what you said when you passed the last bill regulating vacation rentals. And since it's inception rents have doubled. The price of homes & condos has doubled too. That means the common folk must vacation rent a portion of their home to defray the cost of the additional property taxes they must pay. On the Big Island most vacation rentals are owned by kamaaina folks who need the extra income just to make ends meet. Some are owned by mainlanders, but the majority of those bought their homes thinking they'd get them before the prices and interest rates got any higher, then vacation rent them to help with the mortgage and property taxes, until they are ready to retire and move over to Hawaii full time. If this bill passes, both kamaaina and mainlander alike will have to sell out because they cannot afford to keep a house on the Big Island without the extra vacation rental income. When this happens, hundreds of homes will hit the market all at once. For the first time in 15 years the supply will outstrip the demand. What happens when supply outstrips demand? Prices come down, that's what. As happened during the last real estate downturn, there will be hundreds of foreclosures. Mostly mainlanders who have been waiting in the wings for bargains will snap up these foreclosures. But these will be people looking to live in Hawaii, not manage a rental from the mainland. Nobody who lives here is going to be able to afford to buy another house and keep it as a rental. All the houses that get sold will become permanent residences for mainlanders who have been planning to move to Hawaii for years. If this bill passes it will create the chance those mainlanders have been waiting for. The number of homes available for rent will not increase and, therefore, rents will remain high. More mainlanders will be moving over and more kamaaina will be moving to the mainland. To add injury to insult, because home prices will go down, the amount of property tax the County collects will go down. Because there are no more vacation rentals, the amount of excise tax and TAT will go down. After the people realize what this county council has caused, they will be voted out, nowhere to be found to take the blame for all the businesses that will have to close because of the reduction in tourism when there are no more vacation rentals. More local people will be out of jobs and therefore, more local people will have to move to the mainland. The more locals who move back to the mainland, the more mainlanders who will be moving over. The un-intended consequences of this bill 121 will be a catastrophic blow to our Big Island way of life and economy. But this current council will be nowhere to be found so someone can say '"I told you so". Mahalo, Harry Harry M. Pritikin (PB) Hawaii Real Estate Professor, LLC Big Island Real Estate UPdates 74-5090 Old Palani Road, Kailua-Kona, HI 96740 Website: www.konarealestateaaent.com 24 HOUR CELL: 808-989-3491 EMAIL: trusthar[y@31oha.net ❑® When the power of love overcomes the love of power the world will truly know peace. If it's a shark you want, I may not be your guy. I fight for my clients, but I don't bend the rules. I consider myself to be a dolphin; I protect my clients from sharks.