Washington Update - 07/11/2008 (Plain Text Version)
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E-mail Our Editor Senate Approves Housing Bill; Builders Urge Prompt House ActionMonths of intensive NAHB advocacy efforts moved the housing bill an important step closer to fruition as the Senate overwhelmingly passed housing stimulus legislation on the evening of July 11. The bill now goes to the House. While House and Senate lawmakers largely agree on the core provisions of the bill, the House is likely to make some modifications. The Senate will then need to approve any changes made by the House before the legislation can be sent to the President to be signed into law. In a press release praising the Senate vote and urging prompt House action, NAHB CEO Jerry Howard said: “The Senate action hasn’t come a moment too soon. Each passing day brings more layoffs, more foreclosures and more fear. This legislation will help get home buyers back into the marketplace, stabilize house prices, stem the rising tide of foreclosures and restore confidence in our housing finance system. There’s no time to waste. Congress must finish the job now and pass this bill so that Americans can get some relief.” On July 10, before the Senate voted on a final cloture measure to allow the bill to proceed to a vote, NAHB sent a letter to all senators urging them to invoke cloture so that the legislation could move forward. “Because of the importance of this legislation to help relieve the current crisis in the U.S. housing market, NAHB has designated a vote in support of invoking cloture on the Senate housing bill as a key vote,” the letter said. On a vote of 84-12, more than the required 60, the Senate subsequently agreed to proceed with the legislation. In addition, NAHB continued its grassroots push, urging our members to call their senators and urge them to oppose any procedural delays and to pass the housing bill now. H.R. 3221, the American Housing Rescue and Foreclosure Prevention Act, contains several provisions that would help put the economy back on track, save jobs and restore confidence. The bill would:
The legislation was stalled for weeks by Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.), who doggedly insisted on attaching an amendment to add $8.2 billion in energy tax break extensions to the package. Senate leaders surmounted those delaying tactics and were able to bring the bill to a vote early this evening. To view the legislation, click here and type the bill number in the box in the upper center screen. For more information, contact Greg Brown at 1-800-368-5242, x8421 or Scott Meyer at x8144. NAHB Seeks to Calm Market Fears Over Fannie Mae and Freddie MacWith pundits this week inflaming market fears about the viability of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, NAHB CEO Jerry Howard issued a media statement saying that the “fundamental analysis and statements from top federal government officials point out that the hysteria in the markets regarding the viability of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is unfounded. We are in an environment where sound analysis appears to have been abandoned.” For more information, contact Dave Ledford at 1-800368-5242, x8265. [return to top] NAHB Urges Extension of Energ y Efficiency Tax CreditsTestifying on July 10 on behalf of NAHB before a House Small Business Committee hearing on “The Role of Green Technologies in Spurring Economic Growth,” Cincinnati builder Andrea Lucke urged Congress to extend the New Energy Efficient Home Credit, which was enacted in 2005 and expires at the end of the year. The tax credit “is a key market incentive that shifts builders towards significant energy savings in new home construction,” she told lawmakers. “The program allows a $2,000 tax credit to a home builder who constructs a qualified new energy-efficient home that is certified to achieve a 50% reduction in energy usage, thereby adding a highly efficient home that will likely remain part of the nation’s housing stock for 60 years or more.” For more information, see NAHB's press release or contact Elizabeth Odina at 1-800-368-5242, x8570. [return to top] For more information or to contact us directly, please visit www.NAHB.org | ©2008, National Association of Home Builders |