Tech leaders: City needs more innovative approach to regulating the sharing economy
February 21, 2018 | Leah Wankum
Feb. 22 update: After a robust, 40-minute conversation Thursday, the full Kansas City Council voted 7-4 to pass a proposed ordinance that would prohibit short-term rentals in residential neighborhoods zoned as R-7.5 and R-10.
Voting yes: council members Scott Wagner, Heather Hall, Dan Fowler, Lee Barnes, Jr., Alissia Canady, Scott Taylor and Kevin McManus. Voting no: council members Quinton Lucas, Jermaine Reed and Katheryn Shields, as well as Mayor Sly James. Not voting: council members Teresa Loar and Jolie Justus.
Banning or heavily regulating short-term rentals in Kansas City could deter tech companies from building in the metro, tech council members say.
It’s more than just the perception that Kansas City is not tech-friendly, said Chris Brown, attorney and founder of Venture Legal who advocates for friendlier laws for the sharing economy. It’s going to hurt the tech employers’ ability to recruit highly skilled tech workers, he said.
“These employees that are being recruited, they want to stay in a neighborhood because they want to see what it’s like to live here,” Brown added. “They might second-guess, ‘Is Kansas City the right place for me?’ It may not be intentionally, but it’s subliminally. Those individuals will look at other cities that embrace this more than we do, and those other cities will have a leg up.”
Related Stories
• Balancing disruption: Proposal might ban big parts of KC from short-term rentals
• HomeAway, Airbnb critics fearful of strangers in neighborhoods, apathetic landlords
Brown serves on the policy committee of the KC Tech Council, but his opinions are his own, he said.
Members of the Kansas City Council on Thursday are expected to take up the the most recent proposed ordinance that would ban short-term rentals in specific residential zones comprising huge areas of southern and northern Kansas City.
To listen to public testimony on short-term rentals, skip to the 1:34:00 mark of this video.
Ryan Weber, chief executive officer of the KC Tech Council, agreed that Kansas City’s struggle to come up with fitting regulations on short-term rentals is analogous of the metro’s challenges with the sharing economy as a whole.
Weber’s goal is for Kansas City to adopt a more holistic approach to the sharing economy by updating out-of-date ordinances and regulations and gathering key data that would otherwise not be available to the city, he said.
“Our concern is the city is taking a more focused approach on regulating these industries, like a taxi or hotel, rather than taking a new approach, not necessarily regulating the sharing economy but finding a way to maximize the opportunities with that,” Weber said.
Part of the problem is efforts to shoehorn city regulations to fit the business models of the sharing economy, which are entirely different from what everyone is used to: the business models of the hotel and taxi industries, Brown said.
“They’ve all operated under a certain set of city codes and now, all of a sudden, what seems like overnight, we have a whole new business model that doesn’t fit city code,” Brown said. “My concern is when this happens, the way the city addresses it is they look at the laws they currently have, and they try to fit this into these laws, and it doesn’t work.”
Brown recommended the city start over with a clean slate, rather than working within its existing regulatory framework.
“Why don’t we create a new process? Let people rent their home. If a problem arises, we should address it,” Brown said. “But we shouldn’t pass a bunch of regulations that limit participation based on a fear of what might happen.”
There have been tens of thousands of stays in the city, and the city has received only 30 or 40 complaints, Brown said.
“All of this red tape just because of some tiny amount of complaints, it just doesn’t make any sense to me,” he added.
Other communities in the area are waiting for Kansas City’s decision, giving council members a greater responsibility to set the trend for the metro area as a whole, Weber said.
The conflict on short-term rentals parallels to the city’s conflict with the ridesharing industry a few years ago, both tech leaders noted.
Back when the city struggled to resolve conflicts with ridesharing services, including Uber and Lyft, the council members were concerned that drivers would be dangerous for passengers, Weber said. Those same concerns are arising in fears that hosts will be bad for neighborhoods, he said.
“There’s just no data to prove any of that,” Weber said. “What is being proposed is a solution looking for a problem, and that’s very disappointing. The city is listening very closely to unfounded concerns about what this could do to neighborhoods instead of educating those neighbors (about) opportunities that exist with home-sharing.”
Some of those opportunities, Weber noted, are homeowners gentrifying their neighborhoods to make them more appealing to their customers.
The city should embrace new technologies because they create jobs and boost the economy, Brown said.
“I feel like the city truly hasn’t learned from its past mistakes,” he said. “I feel like we’re repeating the exact same thing during the Uber debates.”
Ultimately, the struggle to welcome home-sharing companies to do business in the city “sends a bad message to the sharing economy as a whole,” Brown said, although he noted the city has made some compromises.
“They spent the last two years working on this, so it’s not like they haven’t tried,” Brown said. “I think some sharing companies will stay here, but I fear there might be lawsuits that come out of this legislation, and that’s not going to help anybody. The city could get sued.”
Brown appreciates the city staff’s efforts, he said.
“I just wish that they would not have such a reliance on the existing law,” Brown said. “I wish they would be more willing to take a novel approach to things, (but) I think the city is moving in the right direction.”
Weber echoed Brown’s praises of city staff.
“They’ve worked so hard on this,” Weber said. “And they’ve done a good job of trying to find a compromise when one probably doesn’t exist.”
For more in this short-term rental series, click here for a piece on the details of the ordinance and here for the neighborhood reaction.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Kauffman Foundation selects familiar face as new CEO
After a yearlong, nationwide search for a new CEO, the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation wound up selecting one of its own. The Kansas City-based foundation selected Wendy Guillies as the Foundation’s new president and CEO. Guillies, who previously served as interim CEO and vice president of communications for the foundation, joined the organization in April…
EyeVerify enters new European market with Vodafone deal
Biometrics tech company EyeVerify is continuing its global expansion into Europe with a new deal. The Kansas City-based firm recently announced a licensing and marketing agreement with Turkish security tech company Olcsan CAD. The deal makes Olcsan the exclusive distributor of EyeVerify’s eye vein biometrics technology, or Eyeprint ID, throughout Turkey. “We’re pleased to partner…
What’s in a name? MindMixer gets new moniker
A year after its move to Kansas City, MindMixer is making a name change. Formerly based in Omaha, MindMixer now will go by the name of its new software product, mySidewalk, which engages communities to share ideas and stay informed of new initiatives. “Like all businesses, the more we learn about the people we serve,…
Event-staffing tech firm Pop Bookings opens seed round at $250K
Kansas City-based Pop Bookings is scoring local love from angel investors as it hopes to bolster its seed round to further develop its online event-staffing platform. A recent graduate of business accelerator SparkLabKC, Pop Bookings opened its round in April at $250,000, with lead investments from Kansas City-area angel investors. Pop Bookings CEO Erika Klotz said…
