|
article
feature |
|
Back
|
Print
|
Bookmark |
|
The Texas Residential Construction Commission
(TRCC): the house that Bob Perry built |
| |
|
A TriCC on the Public |
[highlights
added] In 2003 the Texas Legislature created the
Texas Residential Construction Commission (TRCC, pronounced
"trick") by passing House Bill 730. This bill, written by the
Texas Association of Builders (TAB), was promoted to our
elected officials as providing protection for new homebuyers
from costly construction defects. Unfortunately the recent audit
of the TRCC by the Comptroller of Texas concluded the TRCC
"functions as a builder
protection agency". It is clear from this audit,
the TRCC is nothing more than a TRiCC on the homebuyers of
Texas and our elected officials.
The TRCC was
created due to an outpouring of complaints by angry homebuyers
with construction defects, yet not one single consumer advocate
was consulted when Mr. John Krugh, senior vice
president and corporate counsel for Bob Perry Homes, drafted
the bill. Mr. Krugh was later appointed, by Governor Perry, as
one of members of the Commission.
The bill was filed by State Representative Alan Ritter(D
Beaumont), a lumber salesman and a member of the Texas
Association of Builders. He was later honored by the TAB for
his role in passing the bill, creating the Commission.
The Commission was granted authority to create a "State
Sponsored Dispute Resolution Process" (SIRP) a mandatory
process to assist homeowners mediate their complaints with a
builder. It authorized the Commission to create "Warranty and
Performance Standards" to define standards for new home
construction. And it created the Arbitration Task
Force to research the continued abuse of
mandatory binding arbitration used by homebuilders.
As the audit disclosed, the resolution
process is a costly, lengthy, and
complicated process requiring the assistance of an
attorney to navigate, exactly the opposite of what it was
advertised. The warranty standards originally created by
the builders and fashioned after the "worthless" 10-year
warranties provided by homebuilders, provides less
protection for the biggest investment of a lifetime than
a cheap foreign made new car. Once again the builders
falsely claimed these standards would benefit the
homebuyer.
The arbitration task force was to research the continued abuse
of arbitration to resolve defects in new homes. All of the
initial task force members had ties with the homebuilding
industry or the American Arbitration Association. Membership
also included the President of the TAB. Needless to say, the
results of this task force has been slanted and the homebuilder
industry continues to claim arbitration is good for the
consumer.
The homebuilding industry's response to the Comptroller's audit
is predictable: "Trust us. It
will get better." But trusting the
homebuilding industry to fix the TRCC is like trusting a fox to
fix hen house security. They have tricked the
consumers and fooled our elected officials long enough. Our
elected officials, regardless of party, should stop protecting
this industry and start demanding protection for new
homebuyers. If they can't be trusted to provide simple
protection for the biggest investment of a lifetime, then they
can't be trusted with our health care, insurance, our teachers,
and our children's education. And in November the voters in
Texas should demand massive reforms of this agency from all
candidates.
The audit by the Comptroller has validated our long lasting
concerns since House Bill 730 was filed. The TRCC, built on a
cracked foundation, was created by the builders, for the
builders, with no input from consumer organizations. Until the
foundation is fixed, the TRCC will remain nothing more than a
huge "TRiCC" on the consumers of Texas and on our elected
officials.
1/29/2006
by John R. Cobarruvias
Homeowners Against Deficient Dwellings (www.hadd.com)
john.cobarruvias@hadd.com
14646 Cardinal Creek Ct
Houston, TX 77062
281-486-5203 H
281-536-2457 C
John R. Cobarruvias has been an advocate for new homeowner
rights and is President of Homeowners Against Deficient
Dwellings, Texas. He testified against House Bill 730 and has
since provided research on the Commission and the rules and
procedures.
Source: http://www.houstondemocrats.com/archives/2006/01/the_texas_resid.html
↑ Back to
Top
|