As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
BOARDING HOUSE
A residential facility or a portion of a residential dwelling
unit for the temporary accommodation of persons or families in a rooming
unit, whether for compensation or not, who are in need of shared lodging
and personal services, supervision, or rehabilitative services.
HOST
Any person who is the owner of record of residential real
property, or any person who is a lessee of residential real property
pursuant to a written agreement for the lease of such real property,
who offers a dwelling unit, or portion thereof, for short-term rental.
HOTEL
Any commercial establishment, or any portion of such establishment:
A.
Whose principal use provides that such structure is occupied
or intended or designed for occupancy by transients for lodging or
sleeping purposes and includes any hotel, inn, tourist court, tourist
camp, tourist cabin, motel or any place meeting this definition; and
B.
Accepts on-site reservations for accommodations.
NOT OWNER-OCCUPIED
Owner of the property does not permanently reside in the
STRP or in the principal residential unit which the STRP is associated
on the same lot.
OWNER-OCCUPIED
Owner of the property permanently resides in the STRP or
in the principal residential unit with which the STRP is associated
on the same lot.
PRIMARY RESIDENCE (or PRINCIPAL RESIDENCE)
A primary residence is the main home of an individual. An
individual has only one primary residence at a time. If an individual
owns and lives in just one dwelling unit, then that property is his
or her primary residence. If an individual owns or lives in more than
one dwelling unit then he or she must apply a "facts and circumstances"
test to determine which property is his or her primary residence.
While the most important factor is where he or she spends the most
time, other factors are relevant as well. The more of these factors
that are true of a home, the more likely that it is a primary residence:
Factors include, but are not limited to the address listed on an individual's
U.S. Postal Service address, voter registration card, federal and
state tax returns, driver's license, state identification card, and/or
vehicle registration.
SHORT-TERM RENTAL PROPERTY (STRP)
A residential dwelling unit that is used and/or advertised
for rent for transient occupancy by guests. Dwelling units rented
to the same occupant for 30 or more continuous days, bed-and-breakfast
establishments, boarding houses, hotels, and motels shall not be considered
short-term rental property.
TRANSIENT
Any person who exercises occupancy or is entitled to occupancy
of any rooms, lodgings or accommodations for a period of less than
30 continuous days.
The conditional use permit application shall verify by affidavit
that all of the information being provided is true and accurate and
the application shall include the following information:
A. The name, telephone number, address, and email address of the owner,
host and of a person or business ("responsible party") residing or
located within 25 miles of the STRP that is responsible for addressing
all maintenance and safety concerns;
B. Owners applying for an owner-occupied permit must provide two documents
giving proof of owner occupancy. Acceptable documentation includes
Kentucky driver's license, other valid State of Kentucky identification
card, voter registration card, utility bills, paycheck/check stub,
work ID or badge, or a bank statement, each current and showing the
owner's name and address matching that of the property to be utilized
for short-term rental.
C. A floor plan of the residence showing number of bedrooms and location
of smoke alarms. The floor plan can be hand-sketched (number of sleeping
rooms will be checked against the tax assessor's record). Floor plans
shall show details of all levels of the house and any attached structures,
location of windows, doors (interior and exterior), and locations
of the required smoke detectors.
D. A statement that the applicant has confirmed that operating the proposed
STRP would not violate any homeowners' association agreement or bylaws,
condominium agreement, covenants, codes and restrictions or any other
agreement governing and limiting the use of the proposed STRP property.