hutton said that after her listing was removed, she immediately called and emailed the province’s short-term rental registry, pleading with officials to verify her identity and confirm that the address in question was her own.
“but all of my requests fell on deaf ears,” she said. “i was being punished for someone else’s fraud.”
it wasn’t until late thursday that hutton received a call from the registrar, who she said apologized and confirmed the cancellation had been an administrative error. her registration number was reinstated, and airbnb then reactivated her listing.
by that time, the damage had been done. hutton spent five hours reaching out to guests whose bookings were cancelled. some rebooked, while others, she said, were too spooked by the disruption.
“it scared some of them,” she said. “others didn’t rebook, and i lost their business.”
now, hutton is speaking out to warn other airbnb hosts who may be unaware that their registration numbers are vulnerable to misuse, with no way to protect their businesses.
“i don’t think the province is treating short-term rental hosts fairly,” she said.
while hutton supports stronger regulation of short-term rentals, she believes the current system fails to provide basic safeguards and due process to protect legitimate operators.