CALL-FOR-ACTION ON HOMEBUYER TAX CREDIT
C.A.R., in cooperation with NAR, has issued a Call-for-Action in support of
extending the First-time Homebuyer Tax Credit beyond its November 30th
expiration date. You can do two things to help:
1. Call your Member of Congress to urge them to extend the tax credit. Call
1-800-961-3302 and, when prompted, enter your NRDS ID and home zip code to
be connected to your legislator's office. (Note, if you wish to bypass most
of the welcoming message, just begin entering your NRDS ID; if you wish to
bypass most of the 2nd message, just hit "1" on your phone to be
connected).
2. Ask your clients to call as well. You can give them the same phone
number and either give them your NRDS ID or "999999999" for the PIN number.
Either way they will be connected to their own legislator's office which is
determined by their home zip code.
For more information on the Call-for-Action, click here. If you have any
questions, please contact DeAnn Kerr at deannk@car.org.
2009 LEGISLATIVE VICTORIES
C.A.R.’s Government Affairs team successfully represents your interests
before state government, preserving your ability to do business and
protecting private property rights. This year C.A.R., with lots of help
from grassroots REALTORS® successfully fought several potentially harmful
proposals. Thank you to everyone who responded so quickly to the various
Red Alerts this year. Your actions made a difference.
Stopped 3% Independent Contractor Withholding
C.A.R. opposed, and defeated, three budget proposals intended to bridge the
state's budget gap, that would have forced those making payments to
independent contractors to withhold 3%, forcing you to make a no-interest
loan to the state.
Worked to Maintain Your Access to Property Profiles
C.A.R. worked with the Department of Insurance to clarify that title
companies can provide REALTORS® with property profiles. C.A.R.’s efforts
resulted in the DOI issuing a letter making clear that title companies may
still provide you with these profiles.
C.A.R. Stops Multiple Point-of-Sale Measures
C.A.R. opposed SB 407 (Padilla) when it proposed to unreasonably burden
transactions with costly water retrofits in escrow. After a Red Alert,
C.A.R. removed its opposition only after the bill was amended to remove
point-of-sale and require all properties to be retrofitted with water
saving devices by 2017.
C.A.R. also WON on AB 758. AB 758 (Skinner) is a re-introduction of a bill
from last year which would have required ALL homes and commercial
properties to have an energy audit and mandatory energy efficiency upgrades
at point-of-sale; again, adding thousands of dollars to the cost of
purchasing a home.
C.A.R. worked cooperatively with the author to amend AB 758 so that home
energy audits or improvements will not adversely affect sales transactions
and must be cost effective. With C.A.R.'s support, AB 758 passed the
legislature and has been signed into law by the Governor.
C.A.R. won on SB 183 (Lowenthal). The bill is a reintroduction of a bill
that originally would have acted as a point-of-sale requirement for
installation of carbon monoxide alarms. C.A.R. worked with the bill’s
author to remove the point-of-sale requirement and substitute a date
certain. While the bill won't receive its final vote until January 2010,
C.A.R. amendments are already in the bill. The bill will have a delayed
operative date, will not be a point-of-sale requirement, and will eliminate
the seperate certification requirements by consolidating smoke detectors
and water heater strapping into the Transfer Disclosure Statement
(TDS).
Transfer Tax Bill Stalled
C.A.R. won on AB 827 (Yamada). AB 827 would permit counties to impose a
recording "tax" up to $3 per property-related document to fund archival
services. While this amount may seem small, it is only the beginning of
what it is anticipated to be a growing trend of taxing property-related
services to fund all manner of local government expenditures. C.A.R. is
troubled that sponsors of this legislation are attempting to circumvent
local voters by calling this proposal a "fee," rather than what it really
is -- a tax. After a C.A.R. Red Alert the bill did not have enough support
and was not brought up for a vote.
Appraisal Management Company (AMC) Regulation Passed
The recent adoption of HVCC has resulted in an explosive growth of AMCs
which are currently unregulated under California law. C.A.R. supports SB
237 (Calderon) which would bring AMCs under the supervision of the Office
of Real Estate Appraisers and requires that they operate under California's
Real Estate Appraiser Law. SB 237 was passed by the legislature and was
signed by the Governor.
Bills to Expand Coastal Commission Powers Stopped
C.A.R. opposed two bills, AB 226 (Ruskin) and AB 291 (Saldaña) that would
have expanded the powers of the California Coastal Commission which
oversees development of coastal properties. These are not just bills about
the beach - the coastal commission would like to extend its control over
most of the population centers of California, and the bills would set
dangerous precedents for state government agencies that may affect you in
the future. Both AB 226 and AB 291 did not have the support necessary to
pass. This is a huge win for REALTORS® and private property
rights!
"Tax" Bill Vetoed
C.A.R. opposed AB 985 (De La Torre), which would have allowed counties to
charge an unlimited "tax" to remove already illegal, and unenforceable
restrictions from property records. While well intentioned, C.A.R.
was concerned that AB 985 did not cap the cost of the fee and didn't limit
the fee to the actual cost of the program. C.A.R. supports a better
approach involving the automated scanning and removal of the illegal and
unenforceable restrictions. Governor Schwarzenegger vetoed AB 985 earlier
this week.
Buyers' Choice Bill Signed into Law
C.A.R. supported AB 957 (Galgiani), which strengthens buyer protections by
prohibiting a REO seller from forcing a buyer to purchase title or escrow
coverage from providers selected by that seller. RESPA already prohibits
lenders from forcing buyers to purchase title insurance from a particular
provider. This bill is modeled after RESPA applying that rule to REO
sellers for both title and escrow services.
WHAT’S NEXT
Working to Extend the First-Time Homebuyer Tax Credit
C.A.R. is working closely with NAR to extend the national first-time
homebuyer tax credit past its November 30th expiration date. Both C.A.R.
and NAR are in the process of launching broad lobbying and grassroots
campaigns to support the extension of the tax credit. Please respond to
BOTH C.A.R.’s and NAR’s Calls-for-Action on this issue when you see
them.
C.A.R. Legislation for 2010
C.A.R. will sponsor legislation: to expand borrowers’ “anti-deficiency
protections” following a foreclosure; create an REO homebuyer tax credit in
California; pre-empt local property maintenance ordinances; protect a CID
unit’s owner’s right to rent; increase regulatory control on appraisal
management companies; clarify existing advance fee laws; and require
lenders to accept a "portable" appraisal at the request of a
borrower.
Fighting to Keep the Current Loan Limits
C.A.R. and NAR strongly support keeping the current GSE loan limits as they
are. A provision included in the House passed Transportation, Housing and
Urban Development appropriations bill (THUD) extends the current loan
limits until the end of the fiscal year 2010 (October 1, 2010). The
Senate passed a version that does not include this provision. There
is still a great amount of support for it and both NAR and C.A.R. will work
to ensure it is included in the final legislation sent to President
Obama.
FOLLOW C.A.R.'S GOVERNMENT AFFAIRS TEAM ON TWITTER
You can follow C.A.R.'s Government Affairs Team on Twitter for the most
up-to-the-moment information on legislation that may affect your business.
Click on the following link to find us:
http://twitter.com/CARGovtAffairs
C.A.R.’s Government Affairs Team. You fight for your clients. We fight for
you.
For more information about C.A.R.'s Legislative Liaison program, please
contact DeAnn Kerr at deannk@car.org.
