Politics & Government
Short Term Rentals On Tuesday's Orinda City Council Agenda
Short term rentals are already regulated, but the city council may go further following the shooting deaths of 5 people on Halloween night.

LAMORINDA, CA — In the wake of the deaths of five people at a party in a short-term rental house this past Thursday night, Orinda City Council members on Tuesday will talk about possible changes to the city's short-term rental rules.
Orinda's rules for operating short-term rental properties are fairly typical. Since October 2017, the City of Orinda has required owners of short-term rental properties to register with the city. Those owners are required to pay 8.5 percent of that rental income to the city, via quarterly payments.
The maximum occupancy of any space used for short-term rental is two people per bedroom plus three other people.
Find out what's happening in Lamorindafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Some cities and towns, including Danville, ban short-term rentals entirely. Others, such as Sunnyvale, allow such rentals only if the property owners remain on-site.
On Saturday, Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky said his firm is enacting new measures to ban "party houses" from that platform, including expanding manual screening of high-risk reservations flagged by its risk-detection technology; creating a dedicated "party house" rapid response team, and taking immediate action against users who violate Airbnb polices against having too many
people in a given rental property.
Find out what's happening in Lamorindafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
These moves come in direct response to Thursday night's shootings that killed five guests at a "secret mansion party" that attracted more than 100 guests.
Tuesday's meeting begins at 7 p.m. inside the Orinda Library auditorium, 26 Orinda Way. — Bay City News
Also See: