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National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)

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WASHINGTON, April 24 - Calling green building “the next evolution in residential construction,” the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) told Congress today that the best way to help small home builders promote residential energy efficiency and sustainability technology in home construction is by extending tax incentives for new energy-efficient homes.

Testifying before the House Small Business Committee, Michael Hodgson, president of the Stockton, Calif.-based energy consulting firm ConSol, said these incentives dovetail with the normal supply and demand for home construction. “A tax credit program leaves important production decisions in the hands of builders, buyers and home owners and does not require expensive administrative oversight that is usually associated with a mandate,” he said.

Under current law, builders who construct a home certified to achieve a 50 percent reduction in energy use are eligible to receive a $2,000 tax credit. That credit is set to expire at the end of this year, and although pending legislation in the House and Senate would extend it, there is still no agreement between the two chambers over the appropriate budgetary offsets.

“Unless Congress can end the political debate and extend this credit soon - with or without offsets - it will be a tremendous loss for my business and will eliminate the only federal incentive for efficiency in new homes,” said Hodgson.

He also urged Congress to increase the dollar amount of the credit, because achieving the 50 percent threshold required by statute is costly, especially for small builders.

Hodgson said that the housing industry is committed to the advancement of green building techniques that reduce energy consumption, improve indoor and outdoor air quality and conserve water and natural resources in both new and existing homes - all hallmarks of the NAHB National Green Building Program.

“NAHB members are leaders in the green building movement and were active on this effort long before the recent media interest in climate change and global warming,” he said. “In fact, NAHB will be hosting its 10th annual National Green Building Conference in New Orleans next month and has consistently been ahead of the curve in promoting and developing energy-efficient and environmentally friendly construction techniques for the mainstream home builder.”

NAHB and the International Code Council are awaiting final approval by the American National Standards Institute for the National Green Building Standard. The goal is to offer local jurisdictions an “off-the-shelf” green building program for all new homes and remodeling projects that is consensus-based and truly green, but flexible, said Hodgson.

“Green building means making intentional decisions that positively impact energy efficiency, resource conservation and indoor environmental quality throughout the entire design and construction process,” said Hodgson. “Green means doing the right thing for the builder, the home owner, and, most importantly, the environment.”

With the economy teetering on the edge of recession, Hodgson also called on Congress to move quickly to enact a housing stimulus package that will jump-start housing, save jobs and restore consumer confidence.

Specifically, NAHB urges Congress to include the following tax initiatives in the bill:

- A temporary home buyer tax credit. Hodgson noted that a provision in House bill H.R. 5720 could shore up home prices by stimulating sales and reducing excess inventory in housing markets.

- A net operating loss deduction carryback expansion. Allowing companies to carry back net operating losses beyond the current two years would help all hard-hit businesses — including financial institutions and manufacturers — to weather the economic storm, make their payrolls and emerge from this downturn in a position to grow.

- Expansion of the mortgage revenue bond program. This would help struggling home owners seeking to refinance their loans and would be especially useful for communities trying to avoid a wave of foreclosures or an extreme excess of inventory.

NAHB: Earth Day Tips

by on April 22, 2008

WASHINGTON, April 21 - As Earth Day approaches, the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) encourages home owners everywhere to take simple steps to reduce energy use - and to think green when they buy a new home.

“We are all proud of the significant steps our members have taken to make new homes more energy efficient,” said NAHB President Sandy Dunn, a West Virginia home builder. “More than 100,000 green homes have been built by our members in home builder association programs around the country. We’re moving the market - in a voluntary, cost-effective way.”

Per square foot, new homes consume less than two-thirds the energy of older homes for heating and air conditioning, according to federal utility use audits and research by NAHB economists. “Americans who have bought a new home recently should all take a big bow on Earth Day,” Dunn said.  “Today’s energy-efficient homes leave a lighter footprint  — and that’s something new homeowners can be very pleased about.”

Energy efficiency is an important driver in the green building movement and usually accounts for about half the costs of making a traditional home a green home, NAHB studies show. In the new NAHB National Green Building Program, homes must be 15 percent more energy efficient than required by the prevailing building code to meet the Bronze level of certification.

Consumers can choose a builder or remodeler who participates in the NAHB National Green Building Program and local home builders association programs or who is a Certified Green Professional[tm] when they are ready to buy a new green home or renovate their existing home.

“As many advances as we’ve made, NAHB recognizes that new energy-efficient homes are only part of the solution. We need to be better energy stewards in the homes we have now. That’s the most efficient way to make a noticeable impact on the amount of power we use,” Dunn said.

Dunn also suggested three simple measures that can make a noticeable difference for a home owner’s bottom line:

Switch out some light bulbs.  The U.S. EPA estimates that if every home replaced its five most frequently used traditional light bulbs and fixtures with ones bearing the Energy Star label, the U.S. would save about $8 billion in energy costs and the greenhouse gas equivalent of emissions from 10 million cars.

Change the air filter in your heating and air conditioning system.  The EPA recommends changing the filter at least every three months and more if it looks dirty. A dirty filter slows down air flow, making the system work harder and use more energy.

Seal and insulate. Home owners can typically save up to 20 percent of heating and cooling costs by air sealing their homes and adding insulation in attics, floors over crawl spaces, and accessible basement rim joists.

“As national leaders in the green building movement it’s important for NAHB to remind our customers - American home owners - to be energy conscious. We all must do our part,” Dunn said.

WASHINGTON, April 16 - The mortgage credit crunch has spilled over into land acquisition, land development and home construction (AD&C) lending, increasing the challenges faced by builders in the current housing downturn.

“With private securities markets in disarray and banks retrenching, a bona fide credit crunch is underway,” Bob Mitchell, a home builder from Rockville, Md. and former president of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB), told the Senate Small Business Committee during a hearing on “Impacts of the Credit Crunch on Small Firms.”

“This credit crunch actually appears to be worsening despite the concerted efforts of central banks here and abroad,” he added. “Tighter mortgage lending terms have made it difficult for home buyers to obtain financing to purchase new homes. Likewise, there have been dramatic adverse swings in the cost and availability of AD&C loans for home builders.”

Residential AD&C loans are used to purchase land; develop lots; build a project’s infrastructure such as streets, curbs, sidewalks, lighting, and sewer and utility connections; and construct homes.

Presently, funding for viable residential development and construction projects has been severely limited or blocked entirely at federally insured depository institutions, which are the sole source of housing production credit for the small businesses that comprise most of the home building industry, Mitchell told lawmakers.

“The current financing quagmire for home builders vividly illustrates the importance of developing additional sources of AD&C credit,” said Mitchell. “Furthermore, there is no secondary market for residential AD&C loans where community banks and thrifts could turn to help manage their balance sheets and obtain liquidity for additional lending.”

He noted that a viable secondary market for AD&C loans would directly benefit builders and lenders by transferring risk away from lenders; increasing availability of funds so that projects could be more reliably completed; and mitigating the devastating impact of equity calls on builders, or transfers of partially completed projects to banks under capital and/or regulatory pressure.

To broaden sources of AD&C credit, Mitchell called for:

- Fannie Mae to ramp up activity in its AD&C loan purchase program and for Freddie Mac to create a similar program.

- Federal Home Loan Banks to improve AD&C liquidity by accepting housing production loans as collateral for the secured advances they make to member institutions.

- The Federal Housing Administration to help increase competition in the AD&C market by insuring the construction portion of these loans in order to attract new originators such as mortgage banking companies. “As in the case of the end-loan mortgage market, FHA could be a crucial stabilizing force in AD&C lending in turbulent times such as these,” said Mitchell.

- Wall Street specialists to develop prototype private security instrument for AD&C loans. In particular, changes to tax provisions relating to Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduits  and Taxable Mortgage Pools could be helpful in securitizing construction loans.

- Banking regulators to take a balanced approach when evaluating bank lending, especially in regard to AD&C loans. “Small businesses, including small builders, are vital to the economy and arbitrary or unreasonable regulatory restrictions would only serve to harm many builders, and potentially, many banks,” said Mitchell. “It would be ironic and tragic to have the positive work of the Fed undone by bank regulators taking a totally different vision and approach when it comes to lending matters.”

HOUSING STIMULUS MEASURES WOULD HELP CONSUMERS AND BUSINESSES

Meanwhile, stimulating demand for homes and stabilizing housing prices would do the most to relieve the financing and other business difficulties faced by home builders. The housing stimulus legislation moving through Congress contains key provisions that would help ailing home owners, restore consumer confidence, jump-start housing, stabilize financial markets and save jobs, he said.

“Two causal factors in the current housing downturn and the related credit crunch are declining house prices and excess inventory,” said Mitchell. “A temporary home buyer tax credit, such as a provision in House bill H.R. 5720, could stimulate a wave of buying that could quickly reduce excess supply in housing markets and halt the dangerous erosion of house prices and mortgage credit quality.”

Expanding the carryback of net operating losses beyond the current two years would help all businesses that have been hit hard in the current economic climate — including financial institutions and manufacturers — to weather the economic storm, make their payrolls and emerge from this downturn in a position to grow. It would also provide flexibility for home builders with large land holdings to reduce their inventories in an orderly fashion to stabilize home and land prices.

“The NOL carryback in Senate bill H.R. 3221 simply allows businesses to accelerate their claim of NOL deductions that under present law would be claimed in the future,” said Mitchell. “The need for these deductions today is critical.”

Finally, approving a temporary $10 billion expansion of the mortgage revenue bond program, which is included in both the Senate and House bills, would also help strapped borrowers seeking to refinance their own homes, he said. Expanding the reach of the program would allow it to have the largest effect particularly in communities experiencing the possibility of a wave of foreclosures or an extreme excess of inventory.