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Planning commission narrows verification for short-term rental exemptions, keeps state standard
Summary
After extended public comment and staff Q&A, the commission retained the state-based primary-residence exemption for short-term rentals but agreed to allow staff to use government-issued ID and assessor records to verify claims when investigating complaints; renewals will rely on a one-page affidavit and routine renewal inspections were removed.
The Pullman Planning Commission continued its review of Chapter 17.109 on short-term rentals at its March meeting, keeping the state-oriented definition that exempts a dwelling occupied as a primary residence for at least six months of the calendar year while adding clearer verification options for enforcement.
Staff explained the draft aligns with recent state law and was prepared in response to prior public feedback. Commissioners and community members pressed staff on how the city will verify claims that a short-term rental is a primary residence (the state text requires primary-residence occupancy for an exemption but does not…
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