Monday, July 13th, 2009
July 13, 2009 – The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) today applauded Senate confirmation of David Stevens as head of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA).
“During this time of market uncertainty, NAHB believes that it is essential to have a strong and experienced leader at the FHA and David Stevens is the right man for the job,” said NAHB Chairman Joe Robson, a home builder from Tulsa, Okla. “His strong background in the financial services, real estate and mortgage industries makes him uniquely qualified to take on the extensive challenges facing the FHA and the housing industry. NAHB looks forward to working with Mr. Stevens and HUD in 2009 and beyond to put housing back on a growth path.”
Since October 2008, Stevens served as president and chief operating officer of the Washington, D.C.-based real estate firm of Long & Foster. He joined Long & Foster in 2006 to lead the company’s affiliated businesses, including its mortgage, title and insurance division.
Source: NAHB.org
DV Wise
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Tuesday, June 30th, 2009
June 30, 2009 – The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) has earned its fifth ENERGY STAR designation for the National Housing Center, the downtown Washington, D.C. office building that serves as the association’s headquarters.
The designation recognizes buildings that conserve natural resources while providing a comfortable and healthy environment for employees and visitors.
Since the building was significantly expanded and renovated in 2001, the Housing Center’s property manager, Transwestern, has continued to fine-tune the details of the original energy-efficient construction project. Attention to the operation and maintenance of the building is the key to holding the line on energy use and utility costs, said NAHB President and Chief Executive Officer Jerry Howard.
“We believe that it’s important to make today’s building stock as efficient as possible, and these improvements demonstrate how we put these values into practice,” Howard said.
To earn its fifth designation, Transwestern engineers continued to install occupancy sensors in common areas so the lights turn on only when the room is in use. Low-flow aerators were installed in all restroom sinks as well as additional insulation around the perimeter of the building.
Transwestern staff also regularly inspects and maintains the heating and air conditioning equipment used in the building to optimize its performance and prolong its life, Howard said. The Housing Center’s continued ENERGY STAR designations save money and energy while they also send a strong signal regarding housing industry support for voluntary energy guidelines, he added.
NAHB has also made landscaping improvements around the building, adding more plants and greenery to help absorb storm water runoff and keep it out of the city’s drainage system – not an ENERGY STAR requirement, but another way to reduce the environmental impact of the National Housing Center.
“Many of our members build homes with appliances, windows and doors, and heating and cooling systems that meet the ENERGY STAR guidelines. In fact, 840,000 ENERGY STAR-rated homes have been constructed in the past 15 years,” Howard noted. “These home builders’ business practices show how NAHB members are at the forefront of green building – and that’s reflected in how we operate our national headquarters.”
A plaque recognizing the ENERGY STAR achievement has been posted near the building’s
source: NAHB.org
DV Wise
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Tuesday, June 30th, 2009
June 29, 2009 – American home buyers deserve a more equitable solution than the American Clean Energy and Security Act as Congress moves to cut our nation’s energy use, says the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB).
“The hard truth is that we can’t build our way out of this problem,” said NAHB Chairman Joe Robson, a builder and developer in Tulsa, Okla. “We need to make sure our utilities more efficiently generate and transmit power. We need to make our existing housing stock more energy efficient. We need to reduce our ‘plug load’ – home appliances, televisions and computers – and make these products more energy efficient. This bill’s focus on new home construction won’t get us very far at all.”
The House of Representatives on June 26 passed H.R. 2998, sweeping legislation that requires new homes to be built 30 percent more energy efficiently than mandated in the 2006 International Energy Conservation Code. That number increases to 50 percent by 2014 and then increases 5 percent every three years.
“That’s simply too far, too fast,” Robson said. “The market is not geared up to supply the necessary materials and equipment, and that’s going to drive up costs. The result will be fewer working-class families in these new energy-efficient homes. They’ll be relegated to older, less efficient housing stock and face ever higher utility bills.”
According to the U.S. Department of Energy, homes are responsible for about 21 percent of the energy consumed each year. “Forcing more regulation on a fraction of those homes just won’t move the needle,” Robson said.
Nor does H.R. 2998 do much to address the more than 94 million homes built before 1991, when energy efficiency codes became the norm. The bill misses the mark because older, inefficient homes are the source of the vast majority of energy loss associated with buildings.
However, home builders and remodelers can and do play an important part in helping to reduce the nation’s energy dependence, Robson pointed out. “The NAHB National Green Building Program is educating our builders and their customers and providing stringent, third-party certification for all green homes,” he said. “Our members are eager to go green because that’s what their customers want, and building in energy efficiency is a very important part of sustainable construction.”
Robson called on Congress to create more balance in the final legislation by taking a page from solutions that already have reaped great benefits – such as this year’s tax breaks for energy-efficient appliance, window and insulation purchases that can spur home owners to make needed changes to their homes. A more reasonable goal, such as a 30 percent increase in residential energy efficiency by 2012, a resolution unanimously passed by the NAHB Board of Directors, makes more sense, he said.
“This isn’t about making it easier on builders. It’s about coming up with a solution that makes sense and takes a balanced approach – not one that looks only to new buildings for energy reductions,” Robson said. “We are at a particularly fragile point in our economic recovery, and saddling home buyers with additional costs makes it even more difficult to get a mortgage when credit is already tight.
“Let’s look at ways to recover the energy lost in utility transmission. Let’s incentivize innovation in renewable energy. Not only can we not afford such drastic change to new home construction, but more importantly, we cannot afford to wait for new homes to solve this problem,” Robson said.
source: NAHB.org
DV Wise
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