Complimentary wireless Internet access keeps you connected, and satellite programming is available for your entertainment. Bathrooms have shower/tub combinations and hair dryers. Conveniences include safes and desks, and housekeeping is provided daily.Rec, Spa, Premium AmenitiesTake advantage of recreation opportunities such as a nightclub, or other amenities including complimentary wireless Internet access and a fireplace in the lobby.DiningEnjoy a meal at a restaurant or in a coffee shop/café. Or stay in and take advantage of the hotel's room service (during limited hours). Quench your thirst with your favorite drink at a bar/lounge. Buffet breakfasts are available daily for a fee.Business, Other AmenitiesFeatured amenities include a computer station,and dry cleaning/laundry services. The bill is expected to pass during the next Town Board meeting on June 12.Event facilities at this hotel consist of conference space and a meeting room.You must present a photo ID when checking in. Some communities, such as Woodstock, cap the number of vacation rentals, though Woodstock, which had already been inundated with such rentals, capped its number at 285. Coxsackie’s bill requires owners who do not live in the county to designate a person locally to respond to issues at their rentals.Īccording to the research site AirDNA, there are currently 23 short-term rentals within the village, which has a population of fewer than 3,000 full-time residents. Village Board member Katlyn Irwin said the number of short-term rentals in each of the two zoning districts where new rentals are permitted is fewer than half the number that will be allowed if the bill passes.Įvans said the village had looked at regulations from other municipalities when drafting the law. Referred to as “owner-occupied” short-term rentals, communities such as Red Hook, Hudson and Hurley have passed laws only allowing these types of rentals. Not included in the bill is a requirement that owners must live in the building they rent out for at least part of the year. Vacation-rental owners must post fire-safety materials at the units, including fire escape routes, as well as a “good neighbor brochure.” Owners would also have to pay a $500 annual fee per building, plus $200 per room, which raised objections from several attendees who said it was burdensome at the public forum where the bill was introduced. The bill would also mandate that no more than two people be allowed overnight in each bedroom, with a maximum of four allowed during the day. The bill has a grandfathering provision that allows existing, registered short-term rentals outside those districts to continue to operate, and maintains an existing requirement that owners register their short-term rentals with the village within 60 days. The bill would cap the number of short-term rentals in the Village Center at 10, and 15 in the Community Commercial District. If the bill passes, new short-term rentals will be permitted only in the Village Center and Community Commercial Zoning Districts, which encompass only small slices of the community, including a portion of the Reed Street Historic District, Bailey Street and upper Mansion Street. “We didn’t want to be behind the curve,” Evans said. Coxsackie Mayor Mark Evans, who was re-elected last month for his eighth term, said he had talked to town leaders in the Conference of Mayors who had enacted vacation-rental limits and told him he had to address the issue now.
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