Orleans health department staff presented a draft short‑term rental regulation June 18 that would require owners of short‑term rentals served by private (portable) drinking‑water wells to provide annual water testing results and to self‑certify advertised bedroom counts against town file records.
Alex, the presenter, said the draft adds a new Section 8 addressing properties with private wells and that staff intends to require annual test submission to the health department. The draft also relies on self‑certification of the number of bedrooms but links that declaration to town records and advertising materials so the department can flag discrepancies.
Board members raised several drafting issues they want resolved before sending the regulation to town council: whether septic system inspections or pumping records should be required for rental properties; how to capture properties listed through third‑party platforms; the precise inspection timetable post‑adoption (staff said they had intended a two‑year implementation window and annual testing thereafter); and whether the department will have sufficient inspection capacity (staff said the town received approval for a housing inspector grant position to support enforcement).
Meredith confirmed the health department will coordinate with the board of water and sewer commissioners where jurisdictional overlap exists and that acceptable drinking‑water limits would be referenced (and likely inserted) by town council recommendation. The board agreed to refine definitions (to avoid naming platforms) and to hold a public hearing in the fall once wording and enforcement details are finalized.
No vote was taken; staff will update the draft, add clarifying language about management companies and sub‑occupants, and prepare a final draft for town council review and a public hearing later this year.