A new battle is erupting across Minnesota's lake country.
In the first widespread action of its kind, the state has sent more than 600 letters to property owners across Minnesota who rent their cabins for a week or less. In an attempt to enforce an existing law more vigorously, the letters warn that the owners might need to buy a license and undergo inspections -- the same rules that apply to hotels, motels and resorts.
Resort owners whose complaints helped prompt the letters argue that everyone needs to play by the same rules to ensure the health and safety of travelers. But for the cabin owners, the state action smacks of bureaucratic over-reach.
Julie Lien and her sister got their notice after they made their cabin near Fergus Falls available for the occasional short-term rental.
"They don't have a right to come in and tell us what we can and cannot do with our private property," said Lien, who decided to rent her place because of rising property taxes and other costs. "I think it's Big Brother stepping in and intruding into our lives."
The conflict comes amid an explosion in private home rentals on the state's lakes. For cabin owners out of work or struggling to pay bills, their second homes have become a way to supplement their incomes. For others, the rentals are a means to hang on to a family cabin they can't otherwise afford.
Three years ago, those cash-strapped cabin owners could sell. Not anymore.
"It's a reflection of the economy," said John Edman, director of Explore Minnesota Tourism, which has tried to remain neutral but posted an interpretation of the rules on its website.