By Marielle Mondon.

San Francisco’s attempt to legalize the murky realm of Airbnb living in February is already facing its own set of gray-area problems, leading officials to seek new methods of pushing the room-renting company to an officially legal citywide status.

The city’s Airbnb law allows San Francisco residents to rent out their homes as long as they live there for at least nine months of the year and register as hosts with the city. One reason for this regulation was to discourage property owners from buying San Francisco property solely to offer short-term rentals. As is the case in cities like Portland and New York, Airbnb rentals highlight citywide affordable housing problems in San Francisco.

But just one month in, the city’s planning department saysthe law is basically impossible to enforce.

From the San Francisco Business Times:

To enforce the Airbnb law, the city needs booking data so the planning department can make sure rentals are registered with the city. It also needs a clear limit on the number of days a unit can be rented out each year. Currently, the law says an owner can rent 90 days if they aren’t home, but that’s difficult to prove. The department also wants more funding to administer the law.

It took a prolonged court battle and the state attorney general’s zeal to get Airbnb to agree to hand over its list of hosts in New York City, which is wrestling with regulation too.According to Real Estate Weekly, just last week, city council members in NYC “called for increasing the size of the Mayor’s Office of Special Enforcement (OSE) in order to address the rising concerns surrounding Airbnb and other short-term rental services.”

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Read the full story at Next City.