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Homeowners Group Urges New Laws Targeting
Unscrupulous Builders |
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New laws needed in Texas to protect homeowners
against unscrupulous homebuilders and remodelers, a
Texas consumer group announced today |
AUSTIN--09/22/2008--Homeowners of Texas (HOT)
urged lawmakers to pass laws requiring that homebuilders and
remodelers be licensed; that they be required to carry
liability insurance; and that they be subject to criminal
penalties if found guilty of fraud. The group said newly built
and remodeled homes also should be subject to Texas’ “lemon
law,” whereby they can be returned to the seller if
repeated repair attempts are unsuccessful.
“Texas has become a magnet for unscrupulous players in the
homebuilding industry. This is because homeowners have
basically no protections here, unlike in many other states. The
result is homeowners, even whole neighborhoods, have suffered
millions of dollars in damages with no recourse,” said Tom
Archer, president of Homeowners of Texas (HOT).
Sandee Bradshaw, of Hutto, said she is just one of thousands of
homebuilder victims. She and her husband moved into their new
home in Hutto in October 2002, and the next day the living room
wall developed popping noises, knocking pictures onto the
floor. Within days a plumbing leak developed, the fence began
to sag, and master faucets had to be replaced. By February 2003
there were four big holes in the back yard, the back door would
not open, and there were bubbles in the master bedroom ceiling.
Subsequently additional plumbing leaks and sheetrock cracks
were discovered, and in October 2003 shingles on every side of
the roof were coming off. In December 2004 a fire destroyed the
air conditioning unit and could easily have burned the house
down if the Bradshaws had not been home. The air conditioning
unit today sits on top of collapsing soil, the Bradshaws have
lost a computer and a 48-inch television due to an electrical
failure, and the home has a serious mold infestation, causing
critical health problems for her husband and granddaughter.
“I’ve been told our house should be torn down, that it’s
unsafe and unhealthy. Our builder can’t be made to do anything
about it. My husband is disabled and I’m retired. What are we
supposed to do?” she said.
Archer was at the State Capitol today to express his group’s
support for a legislative staff recommendation that the Texas
Residential Construction Commission be dissolved. The TRCC,
established by the Texas Legislature in 2003 to help resolve
disputes between homebuilders and homeowners, instead has
become a puppet of the homebuilding industry and a roadblock to
relief for wronged homeowners, Archer said.
Archer was joined in his support for abolishing the TRCC by
legislative candidate Diana Maldonado, who is running to
represent the eastern part of Williamson County in Texas House
District 52.
Two of the biggest complaints against the TRCC are that it
requires one of its own inspectors to visit a home in dispute,
a process that can take five months or longer, and the fact
that if builders are found guilty of poor or unsafe work, the
TRCC has no authority to compel them to correct the
problems.
Consumers can find information about choosing a reliable home
builder on the HOT website, www.homeownersoftexas.org.
ABOUT: Homeowners of Texas, Inc. (H.O.T.) is a
non-profit corporation, formed in May 2008 and to make builders
accountable to homeowners. This will be done by promoting the
legislative and regulatory enactment of residential
construction reform, including new laws and regulations
designed that ensure that new construction and remodeling is
properly engineered and built to protect homeowners from the
devastating consequences of substandard
construction.
CONTACT: Tom Archer at (512) 502-5349 or via
e-mail at
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