Milton Public Library

The king takes your castle, Richard R. Sylvester

Label
The king takes your castle, Richard R. Sylvester
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The king takes your castle
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Richard R. Sylvester
Summary
This book describes the critical issues facing the public in view of the rapid growth and economic impact of the sharing economy, which has resulted in internet firms, such as Airbnb and HomeAway, to rapidly become larger than major hotel chains, with company value measured in multiple billions of dollars. As greed, many cities view the economic growth as an opportunity to tax and restrict. New city ordinances now impose severe restrictions for short-term rentals, which appear to violate the essential liberties guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution. The new city laws have a major impact on the total economy, and now cause many major investors to rethink their construction investments which are necessary for full economic recovery. Like the canary in a mine, this book gives clear early warning of the foreseeable economic disaster resulting from city greed in their search for more tax revenue. The book shows how police power used for zoning laws and local tax revenue corrupts, to the point where the new city laws appear to violate state constitutions and the U.S. Constitution. The book includes a clear historical review of property rights, where even the king could not enter a home without the owner's permission. As a major change, recent restrictive city ordinances take away the inherent right of an owner to rent property for less than 30 days. Some cities, such as Santa Monica, now ban most short-term rentals, which results over the next decade in loss of rental income to owners of rental property in Santa Monica of $207 million, and $727 million loss to the local area. Nationwide, the economic impact of short-term rentals is on a scale similar to the federal expenditures designed to stimulate the economy. The book explains better solutions to low-income housing, and methods which result in much higher city tax income without lodging taxes. Because tourists are price-sensitive, lodging taxes require spending of most of the lodging tax income on advertising to offset the loss of tourism resulting from the higher lodging price
Target audience
adult
Contributor
Content

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