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Board Of Supervisors Directs Staff To Draft Countywide Short-Term Rental Ordinance, Rejects Proposed Limits

After years of debate over how to regulate short-term rentals such as Airbnbs, the Mendocino County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday directed staff to prepare a new, countywide ordinance while rejecting nearly all proposed limits on the industry. The board also agreed to cap enforcement at three verified violations within a 12-month period. Multiple violations in one visit by county staff would count as a single violation.

The direction clears the way for continued expansion of short-term rentals in residential neighborhoods, despite concerns raised about impacts on housing availability, community stability, the additional load on emergency services, and fire risk.

“I think something we need to recognize is that the incentives for property owners to convert from long-term rentals to short-term rentals are extremely high,” said Patrick Hickey, a local representative of the SEIU. “You can make a lot more money renting a place through short-term rentals in most jurisdictions than you can with long-term rentals.”

During the meeting, Planning and Building Services staff described the proposed ordinance as applying to “inland” areas — meaning unincorporated areas outside city limits and the coastal zone. This extends the definition of “inland” to neighborhoods within two miles of the coast. A map presented by staff showed that the vast majority of existing short-term rentals are located in these coastal communities.

According to county data, the distribution of short-term rentals is as follows:

  • Fort Bragg/Mendocino: 279
  • South County: 184
  • Anderson Valley: 112
  • Westport/Laytonville: 41
  • Ukiah area: 15
  • Hopland: 8
  • Potter Valley: 6
  • Redwood Valley: 2
  • Covelo: 1
  • Willits: 1

Based on stakeholder meetings held throughout the county — including Fort Bragg, Anderson Valley, Ukiah, Willits and Covelo — staff asked the board for direction on a range of potential policy options.

Among them was a proposed “Good Neighbor Policy,” which would require short-term rental operators to provide guests and nearby residents with information addressing noise, trash, parking, pets, emergency contacts, behavioral expectations, and how to file complaints with the county. There was consensus among the board that this was a good idea.

Staff also proposed a series of potential limits, including restrictions on corporate ownership, caps in areas with high concentrations of short-term rentals, protections for workforce housing near major employers, and limits in neighborhoods with smaller parcel sizes. These were rejected.

Additional recommendations addressed permit terms and enforcement, including 10-year permit lengths, renewals based on complaint and violation history, discretionary reviews for unhosted rentals or properties on private roads, graduated fines, safety requirements, and the creation of a housing offset fund supported by short-term rental revenue.

Supervisor Madeline Cline, who represents District One — which includes Potter Valley and Hopland, which together have just 14 short-term rentals — was the only supervisor to offer detailed feedback. She rejected all proposed limits on short-term rentals and opposed conditioning permit renewals on complaint or violation history. She supported discretionary review for private roads and a narrowly defined three-strikes enforcement policy.

Supervisors Maureen Mulheren (District Two, including Ukiah) said they agreed with Cline’s position. Supervisor Bernie Norvell (District Four, centered on Fort Bragg) initially offered no comments. Ted Williams (District Five, the coastal district with the highest concentration of short-term rentals) spoke generally about the need for additional housing for both working residents and visitors and he offered a short comment in favor of three strikes.

He later clarified that he supported limiting enforcement to three verified violations within a 12-month period.

Following public comment, Supervisor John Haschak (District Three) asked for clearer direction from his colleagues. “I think there is agreement, but there are also some points where we want more clarification,” he said.

As the board worked through the recommendations, supervisors formally rejected limits on the number or location of short-term rentals, rejected a housing offset fund, and rejected any owner-occupancy requirement. They agreed that short-term rental permits should be transferable to new owners and that properties on private roads should be subject to discretionary review.

Supervisors agreed that renewals should consider complaint and violation history but did not set a specific permit term. They also directed staff to design a simple, over-the-counter administrative permitting process.

On enforcement, the board agreed that violations would not transfer to a new owner if a property changed hands and that the three-strikes policy would apply only to three verified violations within a 12-month period.

Haschak expressed concern that operators could be penalized for the behavior of guests during a single weekend. Planning Director Julia Krog noted that if staff responded to a property and found multiple issues at the same time, “that would count as one verified violation consisting of multiple issues.” Krog also noted that staff would only be available to verify violations on a weekday.

Norvell briefly raised the possibility of limiting short-term rentals in areas with high concentrations, citing complaints from residents who live near multiple rentals. The idea was quickly dismissed.

“I wouldn’t want to limit people that have existing businesses with a new policy,” Mulheren said.

Cline also opposed the idea. “I guess it sounds like we have three your way,” Norvell said, before dropping the issue.

Williams raised concerns about noise enforcement, noting that the county lacks a noise ordinance and that Sheriff Matt Kendall has told the board he does not have sufficient staffing to enforce one. Williams suggested routing noise complaints directly to property owners.

“If that doesn’t solve it, then it becomes a strike and law enforcement has to handle it,” he said, without addressing how enforcement would occur without additional resources.

Krog said beyond routing complaints to platform operators like Airbnb – enforcement remains unresolved. “We would have to have a pretty detailed conversation with the sheriff’s office surrounding this topic and enforcement in general,” she said.

Williams also questioned whether short-term rentals should be allowed in locations that have not undergone CAL FIRE inspections. Staff responded that fire safety requirements are reviewed when structures are built, not when they are later used as lodging.

During public comment, a longtime resident and business owner identified as “Spencer” described the Airbnb he operates on his property as a financial lifeline. “Over the past 15 years, hosting has allowed us to remain financially stable while contributing directly to the local economy,” he said, urging the county to avoid adopting costly regulations.

Dee Pallesen urged supervisors to proceed cautiously and ensure adequate enforcement resources. “Our code enforcement division has made it very clear that they do not have the resources to address the workload they already have,” she said. “Now we’re going to add this to their responsibilities and expect they’ll be able to address additional complaints in a timely and thorough manner? The last time we heard from them, they told you their workload can’t even handle anonymous complaints.”

Pallesen pointed out that the proposed approach would disproportionately benefit a small group. “This is another instance where it benefits a few instead of the many,” she said. “The industry should shoulder the burden of implementation and enforcement.”

(Mendolocal.news)

5 Comments

  1. Cherry Johnson February 12, 2026

    Had the pleasure of going in to building and planning recently. The kind staff was quick to inform me
    #1 We do not enforce much if at all
    #2 We do not have enough staff for any
    inspections or complaints.
    #3 We are years behind on scanning, back fee levies and current data.
    #4 We can not give you what a department should we can not promise anything.
    #5 Have you talked to a local lawyer?
    There ya go…
    Smile and wave has become department wide best practice.
    Not surprising.
    Smile n wave as I leave the P&B office in a daze.

  2. Peter Lit February 12, 2026

    The Mendocino Coast needs limits; it needs a rollback. Working people have no place to rent/live. Retired people have no place to live. Us old f**ts who live a long way from Ft. Bragg, Mendocino, Gualala have no place to live closer to town and services and shopping. WAKE UP SUPERVISORS.

  3. Local Dirt February 12, 2026

    STRs: 823 Homes Removed From Your Housing Market

    I pulled current Airbnb listings for 15 Mendocino County communities using AirRoi to scrape market data (January 2026):
    Fort Bragg: 226 | Mendocino: 131 | Little River: 69 | Caspar: 42 | Albion: 100 | Elk: 27 | Point Arena: 40 | Gualala: 109 | Ukiah: 69 | Willits: 25 | Hopland: 25 | Westport: 9 | Laytonville: 16 | Philo: 38 | Boonville: 31
    TOTAL: 957 active listings

    Entire homes: 823 (86%)
    Private rooms: 134 (14%)

    The data: 86% are entire homes removed from residential use.
    This isn’t about ‘Grandpa’ renting a room to pay the bills (14%).
    This is profit driven extraction making 823 homes unavailable for teachers, firefighters, nurses, service workers, and washed up hippies.
    While a good percentage operate with no permits and pay $0 in TOT for many years, with a county too lax to enforce.
    Add to that, when fire departments face increased demand from STR activity, they raise parcel taxes. YOU pay that increase.
    You’re subsidizing emergency response for your neighbor’s licensed/unlicensed commercial operation.

    Do the math: 957 listings at conservative 50% weekend occupancy = ~1,400 unfamiliar visitors every weekend. That’s 1,400 people driving roads they don’t know, in properties they’re unfamiliar with, calling emergency services for situations local residents handle themselves. Fire departments and paramedics get hit with surge demand every Friday and Saturday night – then YOU pay the parcel tax increase to cover it.

    The grow era conditioned this region into extraction cycles: find a resource, fly under the radar, pocket untaxed cash, don’t invest in productive capacity. The county got comfortable being a passive tax collector while looking away.

    Now it’s STRs instead of cannabis due to the failure of leadership in developing anything economically beneficial other than low hanging fruit (tourism). Supervisors campaign on “affordable housing” and “economic development” to collect their paychecks, then approve policy yanking 823 homes from residential use. Operators claim they “care about the community” while lining their pockets and expecting someone else to house the teachers, nurses, and workers who make their “community” function.

    It’s not community, it’s greed.

    I sourced this data over a pint, a keyboard, and skepticism as my motivator – all within 30 minutes.
    I’m not even a compensated county employee.

    It’s not governance. It’s managed decline. If Mendocino County’s STR policy were a stock representing long-term regional prosperity, I’d short it to scrap value and sleep well doing it.

    Time for a haircut.
    -L.D.

  4. Chuck Dunbar February 12, 2026

    The BOS on STR regulation: “So sorry, but we don’t really care.” That seems to be the message from the BOS, as told to us by Ms. Cox. Bernie Norvell, the new guy with an earned reputation for caring, gave it a try, but was given the cold shoulder by his colleagues. This is a matter that has increasing power to change our small communities over time for the worse. That’s exactly what’s occurring, especially on the coast, where it’s commonly known that rental housing is very hard to find, and much more expensive than in the past.

    After reading Ms. Cox’s well done piece, I accessed the Department of Planning and Building Services documents as to its inquiry and education of the public about this issue, as well as department recommendations regarding this issue. It’s clear that a great deal of care, diligence and thought went into this work and the resulting documents. I wonder why the BOS almost completely ignored the staff’s presentation of important public interests and stated desires, and failed to at least discuss these issues at length, let alone commit to the numerous reasonable and suggested restrictions on STR’s. One can’t help but wonder how those staff who contributed to this work feel about the failure of the BOS to take their work seriously or respectfully. One also must wonder what has influenced most BOS members to come to their decisions, contrary to the general consensus of County citizens. One wonders about what influence money has here.

    Following are some excerpts from these documents, highlighting the serious public concerns about proliferation of STR’s in our little towns.

    A few of many public comments ( each paragraph is from a separate commentator) from those opposed to STR’s, or advocating for serious regulation of STR’s:

    

“Short term rentals remove desperately needed housing from the market. It’s not morally justifiable to profit off of a scarce
    necessity.”

    “Housing is needed for locals. Tourist can stay at regulated motels, inns, etc.”

    “The explosion of short term rentals on the Coast has decimated workforce housing, attracted outside investor money intent only
    on wealth extraction and contributed to the exodus of young people and families, unable to afford reasonable housing in
    which to raise their families.”

    “In my work in healthcare and with education, I regularly hear about lack of housing stock as one of the top reasons that we
    are not able to bring medical providers and teachers into our communities. The lack of adequate stock drives up the rental
    prices for locals working in all sectors.”

    “Short term rentals have a true cost they destroy neighbors. In mine alone 2 teachers. A radiologist. An occupation therapist, a
    hairstylist, and 7 seniors have been displaced to other counties and communities because their rental homes were or are in
    process of remodeling to become short term rentals. We lack teachers and medical workers. These were long term community
    members that contributed greatly to our community. No more allowed please. None on private roads, owner occupied only. We
    live in RR not Commercial.”

    “We moved from Lake Tahoe to Fort Bragg a few years ago and are very happy to be away from the constant issues created by
    short term rentals in our neighborhood in Tahoe. The added boost to tourism is a sham parroted by owners of short term
    rentals and real estate agents. There are plenty of hotel rooms and campsites that go unused because of the demand
    destruction that short term rentals create. Please do not ruin Mendocino the way Tahoe has been ruined.”

    “There is an abundance of short-term rentals already and a huge lack of housing available for sale and long-term rentals, which is
    what we need to keep our communities viable.”

    “No individual with a rental property can be blamed for being tempted by the upsides of STRs, but like so many things, when
    these start to decimate the long-term housing stock, small towns like ours are left without a pathway to attract new, younger
    talent and build our communities. Even basic service like teachers and nurses struggle to afford the sky-high rental rates.
    And this is a direct result of STRs making up far too high a percentage of our precious housing stock.”

    “We have far exceeded the BALANCE between local affordable, suitable housing for the people who live and work here, and the ever-growing
    number of vacation rentals, AirBnBs and other STRs. The TOT the County needs for revenue is more than offset by the socio-economic crisis created by our lack of suitable housing.”

    “The focus of the county should be quality of life & affordability for thecounty workforce. Period.”

    ***************************

    Summary of Final Comments from public Online Survey (Partial)

    Concern: How do you perceive the presence of short-term rentals in Inland Mendocino County?

    General Consensus:
    There is a consistent sentiment expressing concern over the unregulated expansion of STRs in Mendocino County. The majority of public comments favor the implementation of stringent regulations or restrictions, with many emphasizing the need to prioritize housing availability for local residents.

    Concern: Corporate and Non-Local Ownership

    General Consensus:
    While many recognize the economic value of STRs, especially for tourism and local owners, there’s broad concern that unregulated growth has worsened the housing crisis, hurt community stability, and allowed wealth to flow out of the area. The call for regulation, local control, and balanced policy is strong.

    Concern: Housing Supply & Affordability

    General Consensus:
    • Widespread concern that STRs are reducing the availability of long-term housing for local residents and workers
    • Strong support for limits or caps on the number or percentage of STRs allowed in specific areas
    • Suggested strategies include:
    o Prohibiting STRs in areas with severe housing shortages
    o Limiting STR ownership to individuals (not corporations or out-of-county investors)
    o Requiring owner occupancy or local management
    o Ending STR licenses when a property changes hands (license should run with the
    owner and not the property)

    ********************************

    Common Suggestions for an Ordinance:
    • Cap STRs to a percentage of housing in any area
    • Allow STRs only if the owner is local or lives on-site
    • Require permits to be renewed or revoked based on neighbor complaints
    • Require business licenses and enforce tax collection
    • Prohibit STRs on private/shared roads if majority of neighbors oppose
    Avoid requiring use permits for hosted rentals or those with strong compliance

    **********************************

    For now, but only for now, the BOS has made its highly questionable decision, one that will do further harm to our communities. But this issue is a serious one and will be with us for the long term. I hope caring citizens can in the future persuade the BOS to look again at how our communities are adversely affected by STR’s.

    • Kevin Evans February 21, 2026

      Chuck, thank you for your comments. I would like to connect with you as I have more questions regarding the impact of STR’s on workforce housing. Please e-mail me at [email protected]

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