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Organizing your community to bring public attention to builder’s bad deeds and seeking assistance from local, state and federal elected officials has proven to be more effective and much quicker for thousands of families. You do have choices and alternatives. Janet Ahmad |
TRCC in the News
OUTSTANDING FOX4 REPORT: Texas TRCC from Bad to Worse - Case of the Crooked House |
Sunday, 22 July 2007 |
FOX 4 Investigates: Case of the Crooked House
You expect to get what you pay for, especially when spending $300,000. But one Hunt County man found out his luxury home isn't worth nearly what he paid for it, and a state law may get in the way of him getting his money back. FOX 4's Paul Adrian investigates the Case of the Crooked House...The State sent an inspector who found a variation of 14 inches over 95 feet of slab...He found lots of problems, but when it came to the big one, the slab itself, that was âin complianceâ with state standards. See homeowner's message |
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TRCC Claims they can help, but... |
Friday, 22 June 2007 |
Homeowner seeks help in renovation dispute
A local man is facing a remodeling nightmare after a disagreement with his contractor put the entire renovation project on hold. Now the homeowner is looking for help to end the dispute.There's not much to show for a remodeling project that was started back in April: a concrete slab collects rainwater, lumber sits stacked unused in the backyard, a trench is exposed and demolition to the back of the house is incomplete...Currently the agency covers remodeling projects of more $20,000. However, that amount will drop to $10,000 beginning September 1, 2007.However, TRCC has its limits. The state agency only mediates finished renovation projects, not those which are incomplete. |
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Texas Observer Editorial - TRCC an agency corrupted by influence peddling |
Thursday, 24 May 2007 |
Foundations and Empire
After four years of Republican dominance in Austin, you can throw a dart at the organizational chart of Texas government and reliably hit a state agency corrupted by influence peddling of some sort. Thereâs no better example of the pay-to-play culture that has infected Texas politics in recent years than the brief history of the Texas Residential Construction Commission.
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Are the TRCC Teeth Really Sharper? |
Tuesday, 22 May 2007 |
Senate Approves Bill Give Homebuilders Commission Sharper Teeth
The Texas Residential Construction Commission would have more power to discipline problem homebuilders under a bill the Texas Senate approved Monday. Consumer advocates have criticized the four-year-old commission, saying it limits home buyers' legal recourse and lacks the power to enforce its own rules. survey released last year by former Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn found that 86 percent of homeowners said their builders failed to repair home construction defects, even after going through the state inspection and resolution process. |
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Texas Observer - TRCC Capitol Offense |
Friday, 18 May 2007 |
Texas Government's Potemkin Village
Many other builders are deciding TRCC registration isnât worth the money and are blatantly building without one, according to an Observer investigation. More problematically, some builders whose registrations have been revoked are still working on homes as well. The Observer found that, of the 71 builders whose registrations the agency revoked or canceled last fall, nearly a third were still in business this spring. Moreover, the agencyâwhich has little enforcement powerâcanât do much about it. Itâs further evidence that the feeble agency, created to protect consumers and regulate builders, isnât doing very much of either... Lawmakers filed numerous bills this session to reform the TRCC. Consumer groups backed legislation by Rep. Senfronia Thompson, a Houston Democrat, that she dubbed a Home Lemon Law. It would provide home buyers more protections, and it is withering in the House. Instead, the House passed House Bill 1038 by Nederland Democrat, Allan Ritter, who sponsored the original legislation in 2003 that created the TRCC. |
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Texas Monthly: Same Pig. Uglier Lipstick |
Friday, 18 May 2007 |
Same Pig. Uglier Lipstick
Texas Residential Construction Commission, which exists to protect Bob Perry, David and Dick Weekley, and other well connected homebuilders from lawsuits that previously could have been brought by disgruntled buyers. Apparently one loophole was left open that could have subjected a builder to disciplinary action. Not to worry. The Senate has closed it. Adding the word "court" means that failure to pay a final arbitration judgment would not be grounds for discipline by the TRCC. As far as I know, Perry Homes is the only builder that has been ordered by an arbitration panel to pay a homeowner. He has appealed the decision to the Texas Supreme Court. Oral arguments were heard n March and we are awaiting the Court's decision. See Related Texas Monthly article: Lipstick on a Pig |
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Texas Monthly calls TRCC legislation, lipstick on the ugliest, dirtiest pig in existence |
Thursday, 17 May 2007 |
Lipstick on a Pig
It is undoubtedly a good-faith effort to improve the process by which home buyers are prevented from recovering money from unscrupulous and/or incompetent builders, and Dan Gattis, who has had buyers' remorse about the TRCC for four years now, put his best efforts into putting still more teeth into the law, and so did Ruth McClendon. In the end, however, it still added up to lipstick on a pig, and not just any pig, but the ugliest, dirtiest pig the Texas Legislature has brought into existence in all the years I have been covering it. There is only one remedy for the TRCC, and that is to send it into oblivion. |
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AMERICAN-STATESMAN: Lively Debate on Lemon Law Amendment |
Thursday, 26 April 2007 |
House bill targets builders who fail to repair defects
The Texas House tentatively made it a crime for a builder to fail to register with the state, but rejected an attempt to require contractors to buy back houses with serious defects. The sponsor of House Bill 1038, Rep. Allan Ritter, D-Nederland, said the Texas Residential Construction Commission has had problems...By 83 to 60, the House rejected an amendment to require builders to buy back houses with defects that create a safety hazard or reduce the home's value 5 percent or more if the defect can't be fixed. Rep. David Swinford, R-Dumas, chairman of the House State Affairs Committee, said the amendment would add to the cost of everybody's house, but Rep. Senfronia Thompson, D-Houston, shot back: "I'm not trying to protect unscrupulous builders." |
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Is there any Justice in Texas? |
Wednesday, 04 April 2007 |
A Citizenâs Lament - Was justice denied in a Fannin County court?
âIn June 2005, after helping construct a subfloor for Pat and Bob Egertâs new house in Ben Franklin, Bobby Fines, owner of Cedar Log Homes in Ivanhoe, owed me $530 for my work,â Starkey said. âI called his residence and Vicky Leggett, his partner, answered. I said, âIâd like to have my money.ââ...And Starkey was $1500 poorer because of a lawyer he shouldnât have needed and was still out the $530 allegedly owed him by Fines. See related article: Homeowner convicted for reporting Builder to TRCC & the Better Business Bureau
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