The Palm Springs City Council Thursday evening postponed a vote on extending a temporary ban on all vacation rentals and hotel stays not related to the coronavirus response.

The ban, which has been in place for nearly two months, is set to expire at the end of May, but city staff are recommending the mandate be lengthened to June 30 due to uncertainties with the state’s timeline for reopening.

The proposal is expected to be considered by the council Tuesday at a meeting added to schedule Thursday.

Thursday’s meeting ran for 7 1/2 hours and was adjourned before all items on the agenda could be considered.

Most of the meeting was devoted to the city’s attempt to mitigate an estimated $76 million in lost tax revenue through the next fiscal year due to COVID-19.

A similar ban on vacation rentals and hotel stays was rejected at the county level earlier this month, making Palm Springs eligible to jumpstart its predominantly tourism-based economy if it decides to lift the ban, which has been in place since March 24.

The city’s order applies to all temporary lodging, including hotels and vacation rentals like Airbnb, unless those rentals are being used for “migration and containment measures related to the spread” of COVID-19, according to the city.

Violators can be fined $5,000 for a first offense, which increases to $10,000 and $25,000 for second and third offenses, respectively, the order reads.

City staff recommend extending the order for another month unless Gov. Gavin Newsom moves California into Stage 3 of California’s Resilience Roadmap sooner.

The state’s four-stage reopening plan concludes with Stage 4, representing the lifting of Newsom’s stay-at-home order — which has been in place since March 19 — and the reopening of higher-risk businesses such as sports arenas and concert halls.

California is in the beginning of Stage 2, with Stage 3 including the reopening of hospitality services, “which would appear to include hotels and other short-term lodging,” according to a staff report.

“However, the state is not yet at Stage 3, and the governor has given no clear date at which he believes the state will be there. Therefore, it would seem prudent to extend the city’s short-term lodging prohibition through the end of June. Should the state move to Stage 3 sooner, the city could rescind or modify this order,” the report reads.

The council’s possible decision to keep hotels and local Airbnbs mostly shuttered comes as Palm Springs continues to confront an estimated $76 million in lost tax revenue due to COVID-19. The number includes estimated revenues for next fiscal year, which ends June 30, 2021.

This includes diminished sales tax revenue, as well as lost money normally generated through the city’s transient occupancy tax, also known as a room or bed tax, which is collected through hotels or other short-term lodging facilities.

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