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Tulsa councilors debate legality and neighborhood impacts of private pool rental apps
Summary
City staff told the UED committee that apps listing private pools for hourly rental appear to be operating commercially in residential neighborhoods and are not allowed under Tulsa's zoning code; councilors discussed potential responses ranging from complaint-driven enforcement to city-initiated zoning text changes but took no formal action.
City planning staff told members of the UED committee that online platforms listing private residential pools for hourly rental are operating inside Tulsa and that the activity is not permitted in residential zoning districts.
The presentation on April 9 explained that Tulsa's zoning code treats commercial operations and home occupations differently. Type 1 home occupations allow incidental, noncustomer activity; Type 2 home occupations can have up to three customers and one nonresident employee but must occur inside a building. The planning office said pool listings displayed hourly rates, guest limits up to 40 and features such as allowances for pets — details that, staff said, make the listings inconsistent with rules for home occupations.
Planning staff showed sample listings and said they found about 14 pools listed within the city limits at the time of…
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