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\n Scottsdale Wars Over Short-Term Rentals as Travel Demand Spikes\n <\/h1> \n\n
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\n \n Neighbors of some short-term rental homes in Scottsdale want to see more regulation.<\/span>\n \n \n David Hudnall<\/span>\n \n <\/div>\n \n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n \n\n
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\r \r \r Neighbors of some short-term rental homes in Scottsdale want to see more regulation.<\/span>  \r David Hudnall<\/em>\"\r class=\"uk-display-block uk-position-relative uk-visible-toggle\">\r\r \r click to enlarge\r <\/span>\r \"Neighbors \r <\/a>\r\r \r\r\r \r\r \r \r\r \r
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\r Neighbors of some short-term rental homes in Scottsdale want to see more regulation.\r <\/div>\r \r \r \r\r \r
\r \r David Hudnall\r \r <\/div>\r <\/div>\r \r \r \r <\/div> Every Thursday afternoon, at 3 p.m., Erik Stroud feels a creeping sense of dread. At that time, like clockwork, guests arrive at the vacation rental next door.\r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n
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\n “Every Thursday. Three Ubers pull up. Ten kids get out,\" he said. \"It's the same thing, over and over and over.\"\r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n
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\n The ranch-style house adjacent to Stroud’s home, in old town Scottsdale, is lusciously decorated. According to its Airbnb listing, it offers “sound healing” sessions and, for an additional cost, a private chef. On peak weekends, it goes for $600 a night. When the property sold two years ago, the new neighbors initially told Stroud that an older couple planned to move in. “And that was not true,” he says. “They bought it and, about two weeks later, they converted it into a vacation rental. And from then on, it’s been hell.”\r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n
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\n At first, Stroud thought he could manage it. But then, on weekends, 30-seat party buses began to roll up, with disco lights and bumping music. There have been fistfights in his driveway. Sometimes, a pop-up business rents out the house for a single day and fills it with racks of boutique clothing. Dozens of customers flock to the neighborhood to go shopping. “I can’t sleep,” he said. \"It just got so out of control.\"\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n
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