I live in Washington, DC.
I have been a licensed Airbnb Host for over 4 years. When I first sought a short-term housing business license, the DC government, literally, had no idea how to license me or even what Airbnb was. It took considerable short-term housing research on my part, along w/ a lone, helpful supervisor, to allow this to occur. At the time, there are over 300 Airbnb Hosts, according to Airbnb's portal, in Washington, DC. I asked DC licensing authority how I could be one of the 1/3 licensed Airbnb Host in DC w/ this many listed Hosts? A DC licnese authority-supervisor admitted they were behind the power curve on enforcing regulations w/ home-sharing.
Over the course of 4 years, I have brought this to the attention of Airbnb on a number of occasions and have met w/ absolute silence. They are simply ignoring the problem, to my knowledge. As an issue example, an Airbnb absentee Host several doors down is revealing: entire home is rental w/ no onsite, or otherwise, contact person for neighbours; no business license, which ensures Guest safety; garbage not curbed for weeks on end (last summer I formally complained at least twice to officials who ticketed the Host); rats in the garbage; parking not addressed; and, yard unkempt. DC has Bill B22-0092 as introduced by Councilmember McDuffie, which is at least a starting point to discuss my issues as well as other housing-related issues as cited in the bill.
Then, Airbnb is nice enough to tell me on a daily basis that although someone looking at my legal Listing, they booked elsewhere for less. There is a 2/3 chance it was an illegal Listing. I can't compete w/ illegal Listings: mandatory corporate fees & filings; monthly sales and use reports; fire inspections; a Basic Business License and on.