Bill Text: TX HB2665 | 2023-2024 | 88th Legislature | Engrossed
Bill Title: Relating to an interim study of the municipal regulation of short-term rental properties and residential amenity rental properties.
Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill
Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2023-05-10 - Received from the House [HB2665 Detail]
Download: Texas-2023-HB2665-Engrossed.html
By: Gates, Longoria, Clardy, Perez, Cook, | H.B. No. 2665 | |
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relating to an interim study of the municipal regulation of | ||
short-term rental properties and residential amenity rental | ||
properties. | ||
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: | ||
SECTION 1. Chapter 92, Property Code, is amended by adding | ||
Subchapter J to read as follows: | ||
SUBCHAPTER J. STUDY ON REGULATION OF SHORT-TERM RENTAL PROPERTIES | ||
Sec. 92.361. DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter: | ||
(1) "Department" means the Texas Department of | ||
Licensing and Regulation. | ||
(2) "Residential amenity rental property" means a | ||
feature or facility that is: | ||
(A) part of a residential property, including a | ||
single-family dwelling or a unit in a condominium, cooperative, | ||
mixed-use development, or timeshare; and | ||
(B) rented for: | ||
(i) a period of less than 15 hours; and | ||
(ii) a purpose other than providing | ||
sleeping accommodations to the lessee. | ||
(3) "Short-term rental property" means a residential | ||
property, including a single-family dwelling or a unit in a | ||
condominium, cooperative, mixed-use development, or timeshare, | ||
that is rented wholly or partly for a fee for a period not longer | ||
than 30 consecutive days. The term does not include: | ||
(A) a unit that is used for nonresidential | ||
purposes, including an educational, health care, retail, | ||
restaurant, banquet space, or event center purpose or another | ||
similar use; | ||
(B) a bed and breakfast; or | ||
(C) a commercial lodging establishment, | ||
including a hotel or motel, that is not taxed as residential | ||
property under Title 1, Tax Code. | ||
Sec. 92.362. ESTABLISHMENT OF TASK FORCE. (a) The | ||
department shall establish a task force to study, review, and | ||
report to the legislature on the impact of municipal ordinances, | ||
rules, and other measures regulating short-term rental properties | ||
and residential amenity rental properties. | ||
(b) The task force is composed of: | ||
(1) two members appointed by the governor; | ||
(2) two members of the senate appointed by the | ||
lieutenant governor; | ||
(3) two members of the house of representatives | ||
appointed by the speaker of the house of representatives; | ||
(4) one representative of the department; | ||
(5) one member representing the interests of a large | ||
urban community; | ||
(6) one member representing the interests of a small | ||
urban community; | ||
(7) one member representing the interests of a coastal | ||
community; | ||
(8) one member representing the interests of law | ||
enforcement; and | ||
(9) two members representing the interests of | ||
neighborhoods. | ||
Sec. 92.363. ADMINISTRATIVE ATTACHMENT. The task force is | ||
administratively attached to the department. | ||
Sec. 92.364. REPORT. Not later than December 31, 2024, the | ||
task force shall submit to the legislature a written report that | ||
includes: | ||
(1) a summary of the task force's findings on: | ||
(A) the impact of rental properties and | ||
residential amenity rental properties on the quality of life in | ||
communities where those properties are located, including impacts | ||
on crime, noise, local school enrollments, and other unintended | ||
consequences; | ||
(B) the ordinances impacting short-term rental | ||
properties and residential amenity rental properties; | ||
(C) the economic impact of ordinances on | ||
short-term rental properties and residential amenity rental | ||
properties; | ||
(D) the remittance of state and local taxes by | ||
short-term rental property and residential amenity rental property | ||
owners; | ||
(E) local registration and reporting | ||
requirements for short-term rental properties and residential | ||
amenity rental properties; | ||
(F) the economic impact and hidden costs of | ||
short-term rental properties and residential amenity rental | ||
properties on communities, including: | ||
(i) responses to resident complaints; | ||
(ii) increased crime; | ||
(iii) inability to fully enforce sex | ||
offender registry laws; | ||
(iv) lack of affordable housing for local | ||
workers and others; | ||
(v) decreased school enrollments; | ||
(vi) loss of population-based state and | ||
federal funding; and | ||
(vii) other unintended consequences; | ||
(G) increased costs to municipalities, | ||
homeowners' associations, and residents from short-term rental | ||
properties and residential amenity rental properties in a community | ||
in which those properties are located and methods to reimburse | ||
those costs from the state; and | ||
(H) lessons from other municipalities and states | ||
on successes and failures with short-term rental property and | ||
residential amenity rental property regulations; and | ||
(2) legislative recommendations regarding: | ||
(A) whether there is sufficient justification | ||
for statewide regulation of short-term rental properties and | ||
residential amenity rental properties, considering regulation of | ||
land use has long been entrusted to local governments; | ||
(B) potential benefits and costs of adopting | ||
statewide regulations of short-term rental properties and | ||
residential amenity rental properties; | ||
(C) appropriate protection of local health, | ||
safety, morals, and general welfare regulations; | ||
(D) methods to create greater accountability of | ||
entities engaged in the business of operating an Internet-based | ||
platform to facilitate the rental of short-term rental properties | ||
and residential amenity rental properties, including methods to: | ||
(i) audit and increase the payment of state | ||
and municipal hotel occupancy taxes; and | ||
(ii) diminish or eliminate disturbances in | ||
residential neighborhoods; | ||
(E) methods for the state to reimburse | ||
municipalities for hiring additional code enforcement officers and | ||
to reimburse homeowners who suffer financial and emotional | ||
hardships as a result of living near a short-term rental property or | ||
residential amenity rental property; | ||
(F) the ability of municipalities to adequately | ||
address the effect of short-term rental properties and residential | ||
amenity rental properties on neighborhoods, neighbors, and | ||
families through the enforcement of nuisance regulations and | ||
criminal citations, with consideration given to the transient | ||
nature of short-term rental property and residential amenity rental | ||
property activity; | ||
(G) the ability of municipalities to impose | ||
reasonable density restrictions on the location and proliferation | ||
of short-term rental properties and residential amenity rental | ||
properties to maintain the character of single-family residential | ||
neighborhoods; | ||
(H) the value of elected municipal officials | ||
having the ability to adopt specific short-term rental property and | ||
residential amenity rental property regulations that can | ||
effectively address a community's particular needs and economic | ||
conditions; | ||
(I) whether to authorize a neighborhood to | ||
prohibit short-term rental properties if the municipality in which | ||
the neighborhood is located has adopted an ordinance that requires | ||
a higher percentage of property owners to be residents of the | ||
neighborhood than the deed restrictions for the neighborhood; and | ||
(J) the effect of state preemption on short-term | ||
rental property and residential amenity rental property | ||
regulations in other states. | ||
Sec. 92.365. EXPIRATION. This subchapter expires and the | ||
task force is abolished January 1, 2025. | ||
SECTION 2. This Act takes effect immediately if it receives | ||
a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as | ||
provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this | ||
Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this | ||
Act takes effect September 1, 2023. |