§ 120.27 MAXIMUM STAY LENGTH.
   (A)   No Motel Authority or Hotel Authority shall allow any individual to occupy any motel unit(s) or a guest room(s) in the Motel or Hotel for more than thirty (30) consecutive days unless otherwise specifically permitted in this section. An individual shall not continue to occupy any motel unit(s) or guest room(s) in the Motel or Hotel after occupying any motel unit(s) or guest room(s) for thirty (30) consecutive days without at least a five-day vacancy between stays at the Motel or Hotel.
   (B)   No Motel Authority or Hotel Authority shall allow any individual to occupy any portion of a motel or hotel as the individual's permanent residence or to utilize the motel or hotel address as the individual's mailing address.
   (C)   Notwithstanding subsection (A) or (B) of this section, an individual may occupy a motel unit or a guest room for more than thirty (30) consecutive days or utilize the motel or hotel as a mailing address if such occupancy is within an extended stay motel unit or extended stay hotel unit as defined in this chapter which complies with the Village's adopted residential building and fire codes, as from time to time supplemented and amended, and:
      (1)   A written contract exists between the motel or hotel and a corporate entity to house employees or contractors associated with the entity;
      (2)   Documentation, consistent with HIPPA privacy rules, exists that an individual is receiving outpatient treatment from or is recovering from a medical procedure received at a healthcare facility located within five (5) miles of the motel or hotel;
      (3)   Documentation, consistent with HIPPA privacy rules, exists that an individual is considered family or is providing care for a patient who is admitted at a healthcare facility located within five (5) miles of the motel or hotel; or
      (4)   An individual has been displaced from the individual's permanent residence by a natural disaster or fire, for which either the individual's insurance provider or a federal, state, or local agency has provided documentation showing that the individual's permanent residence is uninhabitable.
(Ord. 24-4389, passed 1-4-24)