
On
October 10, The
California Association of Realtors in it's 526th session,
brought forward a number of 'Action
Items' that will result in forward progress and, in some
cases, calls on C.A.R. to sponsor and/or support legislative
action.
C.A.R.'s
legislative agenda
contains several ways to address issues. The call to 'SPONSOR'
legislation is our highest level of action requiring a significant
commitment of time and resources to accomplishing our goal. This
generally means drafting a bill, finding a legislator to carry it on
our behalf, and involves significant efforts by our lobbyists and
members to ensure the
success of the resulting bill. After a year where C.A.R. played a very
successful defensive game, we are again going on the offensive in 2010
on behalf or Realtors® and our clients.
Additional
levels of legislative involvement include 'SUPPORTING' a bill that has
been drafted by others, 'OPPOSING' a bill, taking a 'NEUTRAL' stance,
taking a 'WATCH' status on a bill, 'SUPPORTING OR OPPOSING PENDING
AMENDMENT' or just deciding a bill is not real estate related.
From
the Legislative Committee:
AA#1 calls on C.A.R. to 'SPONSOR'
legislation to subject
Appraisal Management Companies to increased regulatory control by
the Office of Real Estate Appraisers (OREA). They currently appear to
operate outside of any regulatory control. Further, while the stated
goal was to keep appraisers and lenders at arms length (the purported
cause of the housing meltdown, according to NY AG Cuomo), in fact most
of the largest AMC's are owned by lenders. The HVCC accord between
Cuomo and Fannie & Freddie is wreaking havoc on the industry,
delaying or canceling sales and increasing costs for homebuyers and has
interjected another level of bureaucracy and inefficiency
into the process..
AA#2
calls on C.A.R. to 'SPONSOR'
legislation to require lenders
to accept a 'portable' appraisal at the request of the
borrower. If your customer obtains an appraisal from one lender but
wants to shop the loan, or want to switch to or from a lender mandated
lender, they don't have to keep dropping $450 for another
appraisal.
AA#3
calls on C.A.R. to 'SUPPORT'
legislation setting up a program to
use electronic scanning technology to filter title records for
unconstitutional transfer restrictions and redact the illegal covenants
in a way that does not destroy the original and does not add
prohibitive costs to the process. A bill currently in process ignores
the advancement of modern technology, would require all pages to be
scanned visually for these covenants, and then would remove the
offending passage permanently at some undefined cost to the customer.
This is revisionist history applied to the housing market saying, in
effect, no those restrictive covenants never existed. Yes they did and
we've come a long way toward addressing the issues - let's not forget
where we came from and who fought for those changes on homeowners
behalf.
AA#4
calls on C.A.R. to 'SPONSOR'
legislation to apply the so-called 'poison
pill' of business and professional code section 10226.5
to 'loans' from DRE to other special funds.
This provision, which has existed for years,
triggers an automatic roll-back of DRE fees to 1982 levels if the state
'takes' or 'borrows' money from the DRE
reserve. This year the state came up with a new euphemism for this
theft calling it simply a 'loan'
from one department to another. So we have to come up with a new
response to their creative pilferage.
AA#5
calls on C.A.R. to 'SPONSOR'
legislation to redraft the
existing 'advance fee' statute contained in SB94. While we
support SB94, the language defining 'advance fees' could be construed
to apply to all manners of receiving or even contracting for payment
before a service is performed. Under the current wording, even a
listing agreement could be interpreted as running afoul of the law as
it contracts for payment in advance of services being
performed.
All
of these activities come with a cost - your basic cost of political
survival. When your dues billing statement comes out next month, please be sure to
include your investment of $49 in the Realtor Action Fund.
We're either at the table on these issues or we'll be on the menu. A
seat at the table costs money.