Fairbnb.coop reaches Canada
After being launched in #Europe as an ethical alternative to dominant platforms, Fairbnb.coop reaches Canada, starting in downtown Toronto. This is not just a great achievement for our platform, but also proof that we can change tourism and help resolve some major issues for our local communities.
Our platform is expected to be operational in Toronto in March 2022: Fairbnb.Coop reaches Canada and it will be the first co-operative short-term rental platform in North America. As per our Community-Powered Tourism model, the aim is to accept only vacation rentals that don’t displace locals and to share revenue with community projects: the first initiative that will be supported with 50% of our booking fees is the Kensington Market Community Land Trust (KMCLT), to protect and expand affordable housing.
Fairbnb.coop reaches Canada – what’s next?
Fairbnb.coop reaches Canada thanks to the generous support of the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. CMHC’s National Housing Strategy’s Demonstrations Initiative funds projects that address Canada’s housing crisis in new and innovative ways. “Every Canadian deserves a safe and affordable place to call home“, says The Honourable Ahmed Hussen, Minister of Housing and Diversity and Inclusion.
“Our platform co-operative will initially be launched in downtown Toronto, Canada and 50% of all booking fees will go straight to the KMCLT to protect and expand affordable housing,” says Thorben Wieditz, Director of Fairbnb Canada, the lead applicant. “The idea being to use tools formerly contributing to the commodification of housing to help de-commodify housing.”
“We will put booking fees and money back into the community where they operate”, Thorben Wieditz told.
The co-operative will be designed to avoid impacts on housing supply by strictly listing space in hosts’ principal residences, either a spare room, or their home while travelling. No space that could be used for long-term housing will be converted to tourist rentals.
“We wanted to create a system that is inherently fair, by design, instead of using the sharing economy narrative simply to become the middleman extracting value from a community. Knowing that our idea which started in Europe is now growing and starting to flourish in Canada is a not just a great achievement for our platform, but also proof that people want to see tourism changing for the better,” says Emanuele dal Carlo, president Fairbnb.Coop.
“The idea of North America’s first short-term rental platform co-operative was born out of necessity. After spending years regulating Silicon Valley-based platforms that undermine our housing markets, building an ethical alternative to these corporations seemed the right thing to do,” says Wieditz. “It’s a novel approach,” says Chiyi Tam, development manager with the KMCLT:
“Allowing actual home-sharing, while benefiting the land trust movement is an innovative approach towards alleviating hardship in the housing market. The Kensington Market community has long suffered from ghost hotels and has thus been a Fairbnb Canada supporter for years.”
The ultimate goal of the project is to scale it across major urban centres to support local tourism, the local economy and affordable housing through partnerships with local land trusts.
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Why Fair?
How it works:
The Host earns the same,
the Guest pays the same
but the benefits are for the whole community.
50% of our platform fee is used to fund a project of your choice for the communities you visit.
This is a what we call
Community Powered Tourism.
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