TO SUPPORT A MEANINGFUL, LONG TERM SOLUTION TO THE PROBLEM OF THE UNREGULATED HOME BUILDING INDUSTRY.  TO ENCOURAGE  STRICT REGULATION AND STANDARDS ON THE LOCAL, STATE AND NATIONAL LEVELS.  TO PROMOTE AND SUPPORT CONSUMER PROTECTION AND THE PASSAGE OF THE HOME LEMON LAW THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY.
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ONGOING EVENTS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS

TRCC Arbitration Task Force Survey and Town Hall Meetings

The Texas Residential Construction Commission's Arbitration Task Force wants to hear about experiences relating to the arbitration process when used to resolve disputes related to residential construction. The TRCC arbitration task force survey on residential arbitration has now been posted on their website (see http://www.trcc.state.tx.us/ArbTaskForce/ArbTaskSurvey.htm ).

Homeowners who have had experience with residential arbitration are encouraged to fill it out.  The task force would like to hear from all homeowners who have gone through arbitration who have had problems with new homes or remodeling projects. It's only four pages long and shouldn't take too much time to complete.  The more homeowners who participate, the better.

View Upcoming Town Hall Arbitration Hearings


ATTENTION:

Individuals who have the new home warranty HBW and feel they have been treated unfairly or been adversely affected by an unfair arbitration, please read and respond:

Background: Home Builders Warranty (HBW) has a history of selling new homebuilder warranties and declining 86% of all homeowner claims. There is wonderful news out of Washington – Public Citizen founded by Ralph Nader has been investigating HBW and its conflict of interest with Construction Arbitration Services (CAS) and is calling for investigations in 12 States.

Public Citizens – News Release
Public Citizen Calls for 12 States to Investigate Insurers' Use of Questionable Arbitration Firm

Public Citizen has asked state insurance commissioners to investigate whether insurance companies have been improperly requiring homebuyers to arbitrate disputes using Construction Arbitration Services (CAS), a private firm that hears cases over defects in new homes. In letters released today, Public Citizen describes how CAS is co-owned by a former lawyer who was disbarred for stealing client funds and operates in apparent violation of 12 states' laws….

See Public Citizen News Release

http://www.citizen.org/pressroom/release.cfm?ID=1775

See Letters and doccuments

http://www.citizen.org/documents/Home%20Buyers%20Warranty%20Insurance.pdf


Attention!
Toxic Mold, Public Health and Legislation

A Toxic Mold advocacy campaign has begun!  The goal is to pass Toxic Mold Legislation in the US House and Senate and establish federal regulations to protect the publics health.   Working to make a difference are:

Congressman John Conyers (MI) launches Toxic Mold Congressional Caucus    

Please register your mold experience today at:  http://www.MDAwareness.com


 KB HOME FEATURE
 
Click a picture below to learn more.

PROTESTS

EXTRAORDINARY BUYBACKS
8219 CANTURA MILLS – KB BOUGHT BACK HOME 2 TIMES

8303 Cherry Glade -KB HOME IN SAN ANTONIO WITH A GEORGEOUS SWAMP

 

KB Home Settles Case
Trial KB Home vs
. Martinez.  After years of delays the Martinez family was going to trial, when KB settled the case. In November 2000 HOBB’s Newsletter incorrectly reported that Sherrie & Able Martinez’s home was bought back by KB home. 

See report:
November 2000 Newsletter article - Home Owner Snake Bitten!

FOX TV REPORTED HOMEOWNER BITTEN BY SNAKE! Kaufman & Broad (KB) agrees to buyback a home in just 3 days! While demonstrating defects in his siding, to a Kaufman & Broad employee, a homeowner was bitten by what is believed to be a “RATTLER” that was nesting with its family behind the siding.  The homeowner was treated at the VA Hospital. The buyback negotiation was handled personally by Buddy Goodwin, head of Kaufman & Broad of Texas. 

Update:  BEWARE OF KB’S OFFER TO SELL YOUR HOME OR BUY IT BACK!

KB Home reneged on the agreement with the Martinez family to make repairs on the home, put the house on the market and pay the mortgage until it sold or to buy the home back after 6 months.  The sad fact is that after the Martinez bought another home and moved out, KB failed to make the repairs and discontinued paying the mortgage payments, which resulted in the foreclosure of their home.

Believe it or not – KB Home sued the Martinez family. 

SEE: San Antonio Couple Releases Story to KBHOMESUCKS.com http://www.kbhomesucks.com/viewarticle.asp?artID=105


 

Builder claims a Home Warranty of Habitability and Good Workmanship are too great a standard

The Supreme Court of Texas Hears Case

In Centex Homes and Centex Real Estate Corp. v. Buecher the issue is whether homeowners can waive, by contract when buying a new home, the implied warranties of habitability and "good and workmanlike" construction for the house where the language in the contract is "clear and free from doubt." The homeowners sought in a class action to prevent Centex from enfosrcing the waiver included in their sales documents.

 

Comments on the Supreme Court Hearing – A Message from Janet Ahmad:

CENTEX ASKING THE TEXAS SUPREME COURT FOR RELIEF FROM STANDARD OF "HABITABILITY."

 The Chief Justice Phil Hardberger of the 4th Court of Appeals said it best, "The burden on the home builder is not great: only that the home be built in a workmanlike manner and be fit for human habitation." 


CURRENT NEWS AND EVENTS
Last Update

10/05/2004

9/26/04 -The legal bane of homebuilders
Lawyer Scott Sullan supports Amend. 34, which would lift limits on builders' liability

Christine Tatum
Denver Post Staff Writer
Sunday, September 26, 2004

 

"Greedy," "rabid" and "scum-sucker" are among the nicest words they use to describe Sullan, perhaps the lawyer most despised by the state's building industry. He is the man hundreds of Colorado home and business owners called last year alone when roofs collapsed, basements flooded or foundations cracked, and they couldn't get the companies responsible for the work to fix them… Sullan's legal brawls are spilling from the courtroom onto the Nov. 2 Colorado ballot. Voters will be asked to decide the fate of proposed Amendment 34. That measure would lift some limits on the money property owners can collect in lawsuits against builders. It would also prohibit state lawmakers from capping some damage awards - a power they wielded last year over Sullan's protests with the passage of the bitterly contested House Bill 1161.  

9/26/04 - Legal battle over mold may be near settlement

2,100 Indianapolis homeowners worried that mold is growing in the walls of their homes built by Trinity Homes and parent company Beazer Homes.

Two years of legal limbo could be coming to an end for an Indianapolis-area builder and about 2,100 homeowners worried that mold is growing in their walls… Improperly installed brick veneer has been blamed for much of the mold problem. But some homes have been found with leaking roofs and incorrect grading of soil around the foundations that contributed to moisture seeping into walls… However, some homeowners said the proposed settlement fails to fully repay them for related expenses like fees for private attorneys and past inspections, lost work time and wages, damage to their health from breathing mold and the lost resale value in their property.

9/23/04- Star Community Newspapers/Frisco Enterprise
Editorial
Homebuyers' protections should be strengthened

In a move that could set a state precedent, Dr. David Becka and his wife, Carol, are calling for changes in the Frisco city charter to strengthen protections for people who buy new houses… They want to ensure that homebuyers are as much informed about their purchases as is possible and that new-home builders should be required to file surety bonds with the city to help protect homebuyers when problems develop. http://takebackyourrights.com/

 

9/23/04 - Lawmakers say builders are stacking dispute panel
08/27/2004
Adolfo Pesquera
Express-News Business Writer

AUSTIN — A state Senate committee looking into arbitration reform had sharp criticism for the heads of the Texas Residential Construction Commission and demanded the director take steps to provide consumer and minority representation on its arbitration task force.

See Senate Subcommittee on Binding Arbitration Video - August 25, 2004 - Jurisprudence Committee

Go to: http://www.senate.state.tx.us/75r/senate/AVarch.htm
Advance forward the time of hearing on Binding Arbitration to: 4:01

9/22/04 - Texans Still at Odds Over Bush's Legal Reforms
By David G. Savage, Times Staff Writer

On his first day as governor of Texas , George W. Bush declared that limiting lawsuits was an "emergency issue" for his state…" Texas has gone from one of the most friendly states for consumer protection to one of the most anti-consumer states," said University of Houston law professor Richard M. Alderman, an expert on consumer rights. "It all began in 1995. Bush oversaw a significant retreat for consumer protection, and it was all done under the guise of attacking 'frivolous' lawsuits."… The impact has been felt by home buyers such as Mary and Keith Cohn, whose elegant new residence in this well-off Houston suburb came with a leaky roof that led to rotting and moldy wallboard throughout the structure. After their daughters became ill, the Cohns moved out. The repairs ultimately cost more than $300,000….

9/21/04 - Actress shows comic flair at Austin trial
Sandra Bullock testifies during fifth week of trial about dispute with home builder .
By Claire Osborn
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Monday, September 20, 2004

Actress Sandra Bullock tried to remain serious but couldn't help cracking jokes about her legal fees while testifying Monday as the trial over her dispute with an Austin home builder entered its fifth week… "You guys are pricey," she said, looking at her lawyers. "It's going to be a good Christmas, isn't it?" The courtroom dissolved into laughter, providing brief relief in the middle of a trial that District Judge Paul Davis expects to conclude by the end of this month… Currently half of the ceiling in one of the rooms is falling down and a sliding gate that she requested from Daneshjou is broken, Bullock said.

9/19/04 - Update on Sandra Bullock's Days in Court
by Janet Ahmad
$1.5 million price tag for a home by Hollywood standards is a modest sum; however, when that price tag soared to $6.5 million and the owner cannot live in the home, it becomes a nightmare and lawsuit. 

9/19/04 - Witness: Rot Ruined Sandra Bullock's Home
People Magazine (subscription) - Sep 8, 2004

Sandra
Bullock's Texas lakefront dream home dissolved into a house of horrors, according to ... Showing the jury a video of the construction defects, Griffith said ...

9/19/04 - Sandra Bullock trial continues with builder's testimony
Houston Chronicle, TX - Aug 25, 2004
... foot, multi-million dollar Lake Austin mansion for movie star Sandra Bullock shifted into a ... the house needed $4 million in work to fix design defects after it ...

9/19/04 - Sandra Bullock's Texas House Trial Begins
People Magazine (subscription) - Aug 20, 2004
... The characters are Sandra Bullock, her father John Bullock, Benny Daneshjou and a ... days – experts will come to testify that, among other defects, the framing ...

9/19/04 - Actress takes stand in mansion lawsuit
San Antonio Express (subscription), TX - Aug 31, 2004
AUSTIN — Sandra Bullock, the Hollywood star of "Miss Congeniality," was anything but congenial ... done, about $4 million was needed to fix design defects in the ...

9/19/04 - Homebuilders may have constructed a fortress
Some say their political donations have cost consumers the right to file suit

Joseph S. Stroud 

San Antonio Express-News

When Delores Rollins bought her dream home in the Hart Ranch subdivision off De Zavala Road seven years ago, she had no idea the purchase would draw her into the state and national political fray…   Rollins believes she has wound up on the short end of a long-term effort by Texas homebuilders to protect themselves from paying for their mistakes...  Hoagland said the broad reforms pushed through in Bush's first term — caps on punitive damages, restrictions on venue-shopping and limits on shared liability, among others — may have benefited the homebuilding industry…   "How many times do they have to win?" said James of the Consumers Union. "I think the deal is that it's not about logic, it's not about justice, it's about muscle. And the business community has a ton of muscle, and they don't want to be liable for anything."

9/1/04 - Actress takes stand in mansion lawsuit
Guillermo X. Garcia

Express-News Austin Bureau

Walter Mizell, one of Bullock's lawyers, has said that even after the construction was done, about $4 million was needed to fix design defects in the massive home…Originally contracted to build Bullock a 5,000-square-foot home for about $1.2 million, Daneshjou, who Bullock said was described to her as being "the best architect in Austin, if not in Texas," ended up building a house double the size of the original plan. Bullock's attorneys say she paid the builder more than $6.5 million before halting further payment…

9/1/04 - ATTENTION:Individuals who have the new home warranty HBW and feel they have been treated unfairly or been adversely affected by an unfair arbitration, please read and respond:

Background: Home Builders Warranty (HBW) has a history of selling new homebuilder warranties and declining 86% of all homeowner claims.  There is wonderful news out of Washington – Public Citizen founded by Ralph Nader has been investigating HBW and its conflict of interest with Construction Arbitration Services (CAS) and is calling for investigations in 12 States. 

Public Citizens – News Release
Public Citizen Calls for 12 States to Investigate Insurers’ Use of
Questionable Arbitration Firm

Public Citizen has asked state insurance commissioners to investigate whether insurance companies have been improperly requiring homebuyers to arbitrate disputes using Construction Arbitration Services (CAS), a private firm that hears cases over defects in new homes. In letters released today, Public Citizen describes how CAS is co-owned by a former lawyer who was disbarred for stealing client funds and operates in apparent violation of 12 states’ laws….

See Public Citizen News Release
http://www.citizen.org/pressroom/release.cfm?ID=1775

See Letters and doccuments
http://www.citizen.org/documents/Home%20Buyers%20Warranty%20Insurance.pdf

8/28/04 - Looser lending leads to more foreclosures
Saturday, August 28, 2004
By PAMELA YIP / The
Dallas Morning News

"Over the last 10 to 12 years, underwriting guidelines have gotten much more lax," said David Motley, an executive vice president at Colonial National Mortgage in Fort Worth . "Today you can get a 100 percent loan on a purchase or a 106 percent loan on your purchase to cover the closing costs."

 

Critics say the looser standards contribute to high foreclosure rates nationwide because owners with no equity in their homes find it easier to walk away from mortgages if they get into financial difficulty – and can get approved for another mortgage later.

 

Even with low mortgage rates, first-time buyers have strapped on so much mortgage debt that "roughly one-third now pay at least 30 percent of their after-tax income on shelter, and half of the lowest-income households spend at least 50 percent of their incomes on housing," according to a report published this month by Merrill Lynch.

8/16/04 - The Times – Mercer County
Home builder probed
HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP - Under fire from local officials for unfinished work in upscale neighborhoods he built here, developer Merrick Wilson's business practices have landed him in hot water with the state as well.

The state Department of Community Affairs launched an investigation this month into River Valley Heights Corp., a construction company believed to be headed by the embattled builder.

8/14/04 -FRISCO ENTERPRISE
Frisco Top Stories
By Mike Raye , Staff Writer

Group aims to remodel city charter

The largest single investment most people make in their lifetimes is the purchase of a new home. It is part of the American dream.

For Dr. David and Carol Becka of Frisco, however, that dream turned into what they described as a nightmare as the new custom home they built in Starwood became a "money pit" of problems. They blame shoddy construction and plumbing problems for rendering their "dream home" uninhabitable, and appeared before the Frisco City Council last year to share their fears over what they said was black mold that grew in the damp environment caused by water leaks in the house that began shortly before they closed on the home in June 1998…

8/14/04 -Pepperell Free Press
Pepperell mold victim going national to back mold bill, Davis takes her story to Washington
By Don Eriksson
Friday, August 13, 2004

PEPPERELL -- Mold victim Nancy Davis will carry her story to Washington , D.C. , and tell it to legislators during Mold Awareness Week, Sept. 19-24, as part of a national consortium that is drumming up support for a bill filed by Michigan Congressman John Conyers Jr. that would establish federal mold regulations.

8/13/04 - Residential housing standards are in the works
Adolfo Pesquera
Express-News Business Writer

Skating between the public's skepticism and an industry increasingly sensitive about its image, the Texas Residential Construction Commission rolled into San Antonio late Wednesday to solicit comments on its draft for housing standards…

The existing draft is essentially a carbon copy of the limited warranties that homeowners have found so troublesome over the past decade, said Janet Ahmad, president of Homeowners for Better Building … Despite Thomas' assurances, Scott Emerson of Scott's Inspection Co. spoke for many in the audience when he noted that the commission had a perception hurdle to overcome — eight of its nine members earn their livelihood within the homebuilding industry.

8/12/04 - Consumer groups skeptical of new law
Industry-created legislation creates dispute resolution
By PURVA PATEL
Copyright 2004 Houston Chronicle

Texas builders received a little-noticed victory during last year's legislative session: the industry-drafted Texas Residential Construction Commission Act. "Although it was touted as legislation that extends more homeowner protections with the creation of a commission to govern the industry, consumer advocates say the new law works more to protect builders than homeowners. Homeowners really don't have any rights at all," said Cheryl Turner, a consumer attorney in Dallas .

8/12/04 - Crooked contractors leave clients in shambles
'I feel like I have zero rights,' says a homeowner whose work was left shoddy and unfinished
By PURVA PATEL

Copyright 2004 Houston Chronicle

•The state attorney general's office received about 750 complaints about contractors in the last two years.
•The Better Business Bureau of Metropolitan Houston has received some 4,200 complaints in the past three years.
•The Harris County district attorney office's consumer fraud division reports receiving more complaints about contractors than any other profession since Tropical Storm Allison struck the city in 2001.

7/01/04 - Bank dismisses mortgage for mold-affected Davis family

"Washington Mutual Savings Bank [of Jacksonville , Fla. ] and Fannie Mae is charging off the mortgage," Nancy Davis said. "It's just wonderful news… on May 28 the Department of Housing and Urban Development released a "Radon Gas and Mold Notice and Release Agreement" ( www.aerotechlabs.com) that is now a requirement for all HUD home sales contracts to make certain that purchasers know radon gas and mold may cause health problems.

6/29/04 - New Jersey continues to crackdown on development & builder political corruption
FBI raids the home of former mayor of Marlboro, while a former mayor of Ashury Prark Kenneth "Butch" Saunders is set to be sentenced in federal court in Newark July 8 for conspiring four years ago to bribe a city councilwoman, for her votes on redevelopment. Ocean Township Mayor Terrance D. Weldon, pleaded guilty in October 2002 to extorting bribes from land developers in that township.

FBI raid former Marlboro mayor's home
MARLBORO --- A raid by federal agents on the home of a former mayor is the latest move in an expanding probe into whether developers influenced local politicians to get projects approved, according to a published report. "We're investigating allegations of bribery, extortion and public corruption in Marlboro and the former Marlboro political climate," Edward J. Kahrer, an FBI supervisory special agent, told the Asbury Park Sunday Press.

Ex-Asbury mayor to be sentenced July 8 for bribe plot, tax fraud
ASBURY PARK -- Former city Mayor Kenneth "Butch" Saunders is set to be sentenced in federal court in Newark July 8 for conspiring four years ago to bribe a city councilwoman for her votes on redevelopment so that he could get his own corrupt payments if a deal went through.

McCarren is the lead prosecutor of charges against several Monmouth County officials the past two years, including former Ocean Township Mayor Terrance D. Weldon, who pleaded guilty in October 2002 to extorting bribes from land developers in that township.

6/28/04 - DEPARTMENT OF REAL ESTATE ASSESSES CIVIL
PENALTIES AGAINST KB HOME FOR REAL ESTATE VIOLATIONS
PRESS RELEASE: STATE OF ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF REAL ESTATE

CASA GRANDE– Real Estate Commissioner Elaine Richardson recently signed a
Consent Order finding developer and broker KB Home-Phoenix to be in violation of Real
Estate laws in the SK Ranch Subdivision located in Casa Grande. Combined civil
penalties and settlement payments totaled in excess of $43,000.

6/23/04 - Builder admits payoffs to ex-Hudson exec
For $115,000, political contributor won $10 million in government funds

Joseph Barry, a politically active builder whose luxury homes and shopping complexes have reshaped towns throughout New Jersey , admitted yesterday paying nearly $115,000 in bribes to win government financing for a project on the Hoboken waterfront… Barry told U.S. District Judge Joel Pisano, was a "reward" for Janiszewski's help in getting almost $10 million in government grants and loans for the Shipyard, a 45-acre riverfront housing and shopping complex in Hoboken. Unbeknownst to Barry, Janiszewski at the time was cooperating with the FBI after being caught taking bribes from another contractor.

 

6/23/04 - Contractor took money, but did no work, police say

On Sunday, borough police charged the contractor, Roger Louis Hemhauser, 54, with nine counts of theft, saying he has bilked borough residents out of approximately $200,000 since November. He took at least $98,000 more from residents in Edison and Woodbridge , according to police in those townships.

6/16/04 - KB revives an old tone with a whole new meaning – “Home, home on the range.” 
ONLY IN
AMERICA !  

Finally some of the true facts are beginning to emerge about KB’s opportunistic benefits, compliments of federal taxpayers.

We as taxpayers need to ask elected official, HUD and VA how KB Home was allowed to continue building and selling 300 additional federally insured homes on the bomb-ridden land despite extensive public exposure and after it was designated a million dollar, #1 US Army Corps of Engineers priority clean up site.  Please write your elected officials and request answers as to why HUD after being informed did allow construction to continue unimpeded.

 

Quote of the year from president of the Fort Worth division for KB Home:

 "There are a lot of happy homeowners," Christian added. "(Homes) continue to sell at a fast pace."

 

Truly it can be said that KB made a Lemonade Empire out of Lemons that gave a “BOOM” to the homebuilding industry like creative Corporate America has never seen.  Corporate Welfare is alive and well in America.

6/16/04 Home on the bombing range
Inman News -
Military history still haunts development site

Unexploded bombs that may be present at the site could have the potential to injure or kill people, according to Army Corps of Engineers reports. In 1983, during the construction of a 35-acre mobile home park at the former Five Points site, work was halted when a practice bomb was discovered there. A cleanup on that site followed, and an estimated 3,000 practice bombs were recovered from that portion of the site… Other bomb types were reportedly dropped at the site including the 100-pound M38A2 practice bomb and practice versions of the M47 chemical bomb…

According to court documents, King-Lewis stated in a sworn affidavit that she was approached in 2002 by Victor Toledo, a KB Home representative who allegedly "did attempt to coerce, bribe, induce, manipulate and persuade me to sign…false affidavits." She also reported that Toledo "was unquestionably clear in his attempts to harass and force my family and me into submission by the offer of financial compensation as an inducement, in exchange for my signature on a false affidavit, which would be used to give witness against Janet Ahmad in his pursuit of future criminal actions against her."

6/2/04 - Charges Dropped Against Home Construction Watchdog
ASSOCIATED PRESS - FORT WORTH, Texas (AP)
_ Prosecutors have dropped charges against an activist for homeowners who had been accused of planting a small bomb in a neighborhood to influence a lawsuit. Tarrant County officials said Tuesday they dropped the charges last week against Janet Ahmad, National President of HomeOwners for Better Building . Ahmad had faced two felony counts of tampering with evidence related to a 911 call to Arlington police about an old military practice bomb found in a neighborhood. Her attorney, Mark Daniel, called the charges "baseless." "Mrs. Ahmad has always been a capable advocate for the consumer opposing shoddy home construction," Daniel said.

6/2/04 - KB Home Critic Ahmad Absolved In Tampering Case
Tarrant DA Says There Was 'No Offense.'
SAL Political Snitch
David zings Goliath, again.

“She was charged and indicted after KB mounted a huge campaign aimed at pressuring the DA and the courts to crucify her. She is currently being sued by KB to the tune of $20 million because of her criticisms of what she calls shady practices and shoddy construction. The Snitch has learned that KB representatives may have gone as far as offering "bribes and incentives" to potential witnesses to "nail" Ahmad, according to well placed sources and documents seen by the Snitch.”  SEE FULL STORY BELOW

6/2/04 - Judge dismisses tampering charges
Sheila Hotchkin

Express-News Staff Writer

“A judge has dismissed charges accusing a
San Antonio woman of tampering with evidence in an attempt to influence a lawsuit against a Fortune 500 homebuilder… In a press release, Ahmad's attorney Mark Daniel said "It is regrettable that KB Home sought to bring a baseless criminal prosecution in an effort to gain leverage and silence her efforts."

  5/26/04 - Panel Finds Mold in Buildings Is No Threat to Most People
The New York Times

By ANAHAD O'CONNOR

Stepping into an issue that has alarmed homeowners and led to hundreds of lawsuits and billions of dollars in insurance payments, a government panel of experts reported yesterday that toxic mold in homes did not appear to pose a serious health threat to most people…

 

Yesterday's findings drew criticism from homeowners who say they have experienced the phenomenon.

 

"I get calls from people every day saying they've had water problems, windows that leak, or water plumbing events behind the walls," said Janet Ahmad, president of Homeowners for Better Building in San Antonio , an advocacy group for people affected by mold. "Somebody in the house usually has nosebleeds. They go away for the weekend and the children stop coughing and having nosebleeds."

5/26/04 - Homewrecked
Fox29 Undercover Investigation
Jeff Cole, Reporter

Life-threatening construction defects in homes valued at a half-million dollars !!! These are the findings of a Fox 29 Undercover investigation into shoddy home construction. Fox 29 Undercover begins a series of reports over the next few months. We begin our "Homewrecked" series in New Jersey . For some it's not a “ Garden State .”

5/23/04 -Buying a house, building up the tension
Outstanding!
The following article exposes the enormity of homeowners’ disputes over defective home construction.  The staff writer, Mitchell Kline of Tennessean.com has done a superb job of helping readers relate to the frustrations and problems of homeowners.

The Tennessean
Buying a house, building up the tension

Attorney Jean Harrison said she's swamped with phone calls from unhappy homeowners and a stack of cases that continues to rise…

4/28/2004 SAHA faces giving back fed funds
San Antonio Express-News by Ron Wilson
The San Antonio Housing Authority must repay $1.86 million to the U.S. government and could be charged an additional $2.02 million, according to a federal audit of the Mirasol Homes public housing project.   Details in the report released Tuesday suggest there was a sweetheart deal between SAHA and builder KB Home that went back to 1997, two years before the Mirasol contract was signed.

KENS 5 Video: Audit shows misspent funds   - 04/27/04

4/17/2004 Mirasol pays off big for S.A. builders; Analysis shows huge profits at project run by SAHA.
by Ron Wilson
EXPRESS-NEWS STAFF WRITER

Of $20 million in tax money spent to build the Mirasol Homes public housing project, private builders took as much as $9 million in profit, a new analysis shows.

In return, taxpayers and residents received 247 houses that critics say failed to meet federal standards.

Your Tax Dollars at Work
KB Home's “Sweetheart Deal” and “High Profit” HUD Program
Photos of One-Year-Old Defective Mirasol Homes – Missing Backdoors and Windows

     

4/14/2004 Cleveland's Community Development Office and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development

“…flushed $21.2 million down the sewer.”

Cleveland Mayor Jane Campbell appoints Task Force

The U.S. Attorney's office investigates how private contractors got away with away with substandard work for low-and-moderate-income homeowners. “Two prominent names you won't see in the indictment are the city of Cleveland's Community Development Office and HUD. But it was their mismanagement of these hand-picked remodelers and city inspectors that made these abuses possible.”

Three Articles: THE PLAIN DEALERCLEVELAND.COM

4/11/04 Reporters examined repairs, documents
http://www.cleveland.com/search/index.ssf?/base/cuyahoga/108167746580820.xml?ncounty_cuyahoga

Plain Dealer reporters spent four months examining home renovation work done under Cleveland's Repair-A-Home and the Senior Housing Assistance programs. They reviewed thousands of pages of documents and interviewed over 100 homeowners, builders and public officials…

Editorial
4/13/04
Simply shabby
Cleveland's federally funded Repair-A- Home and Senior Housing Assistance programs have wantonly flushed $21.2 million down the sewer during the last five years. The botched programs desperately need major renovations.  Plain Dealer reporters Sheryl Harris and Dave Davis reported Sunday that the city has allowed private contractors to get away with substandard work for low-and moderate-income homeowners. In some cases, these homeowners had borrowed thousands of dollars to make the repairs. Here's our solution: Don't mend these programs - they are too far gone for that. Suspend them. Then the city and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development must rebuild them, adding safeguards that protect homeowners and taxpayers from rip-off repair companies and dishonest city inspectors…
 

04/14/04 Task force to analyze repair programs
Cleveland Mayor Jane Campbell yesterday named a task force to examine shortcomings in two home repair programs that have received more than $21 million in tax dollars in the last five years… Meanwhile, two Cleveland councilmen called for council hearings to probe allegations of fraud and mismanagement in the Repair-A-Home and Senior Housing Assistance programs…

4/4/2004 New Jersey continues to get tough with building contractors 
Other states continue to pass bills to protect builders while New Jersey cracks down

By Janet Ahmad, National president of HomeOwners for Better Building

For the past year New Jersey’s Consumer Affairs has been under extensive scrutiny and investigation for ineffective regulation of builders.  The New Jersey State Warranty was the only system of its kind until the Texas legislature last year passed the same type of bill, ironically at the very time the New Jersey law was under fire.

A flood of homeowner complaints has prompted New Jersey state officials to hold hearings that question the failure of the State Warranty to protect homebuyers. Recent exposure of corruption and indictments of state officials has legislators considering extensive reforms to better protect consumers.

Meanwhile, for the past year and a half the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) has been busy lobbying every state in the nation for passage of a “Builders Right to Cure” bill designed to protect builders from being sued for defectively built homes.  Texas was the first state to pass this type bill in the 1990’s and has become the model state to protect builders by providing a lengthy, costly and burdensome process for homebuyers stuck with defective homes.  While homeowners in Texas are calling for a repeal of builder protection laws, NAHB has been resourceful at lobbying for the passage of bills to protect fraudulent building practices and bad builders across the country.     

The New Jersey crackdown and reform measures to protect homebuyers are admirable and continue to get high marks as the issue dominates the news. HomeOwners for Better Building and other similar consumer groups will continue to keep a watchful eye on New Jersey as it seeks to lead the nation to protect homebuyers from the most serious, widespread consumer fraud issue in the nation.  

http://www.phillyburbs.com/pb-dyn/news/112-03312004-274323.html

4/3/2004 After flood of complaints, panel withholds bonds from builder
By JAMES QUIRK, FREEHOLD BUREAU, Published in the Asbury Park Press 4/01/04

If you plan on visiting David Jarashow's back yard on any given day, a word of advice: Don't wear nice shoes…

"When it rains, it's like a river," said Jarashow, who bought the home for roughly $450,000 last January. It gets so flooded that Jarashow's 3-year-old son, Danny, likes to call the back yard "the beach." "I don't know the last time the council refused a bond release," Mayor Robert Kleinberg said. "My administration is changin