Stoll Berne and Nick Kahl, LLC File Discrimination Class Action Suit Against Airbnb

Stoll Berne and Nick Kahl LLC, filed a class action complaint in Multnomah County Circuit Court against Airbnb, Inc., alleging that Airbnb’s booking policies discriminate against African-Americans.

The complaint alleges that Airbnb offers different services to African-Americans than it does to Caucasians. The lawsuit, Patricia Harrington, et al. v. Airbnb, Inc., seeks to compel Airbnb to offer its public accommodations free of discrimination and to enforce Oregon’s public accommodations laws.

The class alleges that Airbnb’s booking policies violate Oregon law by mandating that guests wishing to access accommodations available on Airbnb’s platform maintain a profile that includes a photograph and the guest’s full name. The profile photo and name of the guest are required at the time of booking and hosts are allowed to consider the booking based on those and other immutable characteristics. Some Airbnb hosts, in turn, deny booking requests from African-American guests because of their race. Because of this practice, African-American members of Airbnb do not have access to the same accommodations available to other guests, in violation of Oregon’s public accommodations laws.

Josh Ross, co-managing Shareholder of Stoll Berne and counsel for Plaintiff and the proposed class, notes “Laws were enacted decades ago to prohibit discrimination in public accommodations. If the public learned that a major hotel chain would not allow guests to book rooms online without the hotel first looking at the guest’s photograph and full name, there would be outrage. In many ways, the new shared economy allows discrimination to continue in a somewhat hidden manner, but the same rules apply. Much like the public should expect to have access to online booking of hotel rooms without fear of discrimination, we ask that Airbnb, which maintains a public accommodation, follow the same practice.”

Plaintiff Patricia Harrington claims Airbnb denied her request to allow her and others like her to join Airbnb free of its discriminatory policies. Airbnb refused. Because of this denial, Harrington and others are not able to access the public accommodation free of discrimination.

“Airbnb is a public accommodation under Oregon law because it offers services and lodging to the public,” said Nick Kahl, counsel for Plaintiff and the proposed class. “Airbnb, like all other providers of public accommodations, must follow the law by preventing and prohibiting discrimination.”

The case is Patricia Harrington v. Airbnb, Inc., number 17CV09710, in the Multnomah County Circuit Court, Oregon.

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