NBN Online for the week of May 9, 2005

(Plain Text Version) for full graphical version, click here.

In This Issue:

Front Page
Housing to Stay Healthy as It Recedes From Its Peak
Will You Be the Next Winner of a Digital Camera?
Customize Your Computer’s Cursor With the NBN ‘Hammer’
Key Endangered Species Rules Revised in Florida
Layouts for Living
Floor Plans: High-End Rental Overlooks San Francisco Bay
Coast to Coast
Adjustable Real Estate Loan Activity Soars
Economics & Finance
Hot Markets Raise Some Housing Bubble Concerns
Housing Busts Don’t Inevitably Follow Booms
Housing Consolidation Trend to Continue
Sunbelt Shines as Hottest Housing Region
Rural Housing Discussed With Agriculture Secretary
Eye on the Economy
Tips
Builders' Tip: Locking Electrical Cords Together
Business Management
For Better Sales Success: Define Your Product
Seniors Housing
Active Adult Rental Housing Is an Emerging Trend
Remodelers
PATH Provides Advice on Energy-Efficient Rehabs
Education
Make Your Home Designs Stand Out
Education Calendar
Sales and Marketing
Home Buying a Lengthy Decision for Most Consumers
Labor
Project CRAFT Grads Cap Decade of Success in Orlando
Building Products
Underground Tanks Fuel Gas Appliances in Rural Areas
Builder's Engineer
The Three Levels of 'Idiotdom'
TV
NAHB-Produced Shows on HGTV & DIY — This Week
Endowment
Greystone Gives Million-Dollar Gift to Endowment
Association News
Tangye, Ruma Inducted Into Housing Hall of Fame
Teachers Go for Network Version of Building Homes of Our Own
Get GM Discount on More Than 80 Vehicles
Calendar of Events

Related Articles

Hot Markets Raise Some Housing Bubble Concerns

Housing Busts Don’t Inevitably Follow Booms

Housing Consolidation Trend to Continue

Sunbelt Shines as Hottest Housing Region

Eye on the Economy

Rural Housing Discussed With Agriculture Secretary

In a meeting with Secretary of Agriculture Mike Johanns on April 25, NAHB Immediate Past President Bobby Rayburn and Jess Hall, a builder from Palmer, Alaska, and chairman of the NAHB Housing Finance Committee, reiterated the importance of the Rural Housing Service's (RHS) multifamily and single-family loan programs in helping to provide safe, decent and affordable housing for rural families.

In recent years, the service’s multifamily programs have been severely underfunded, preventing them from being used to build any new affordable housing. Also, many of the multifamily properties in the RHS portfolio are in dire need of rehabilitation.

Rayburn urged Johanns to include NAHB as a stakeholder in discussions seeking solutions to the multifamily dilemma.

Hall expressed NAHB’s appreciation for the U.S. Forest Service's exemption of the Tongass National Forest in Alaska from the Roadless Area Conservation Rule, commonly known as the Roadless Rule.

The Tongass exemption will allow local communities such as Ketchikan to continue to survive and grow, Hall said. Timber from the Tongass accounts for a significant percentage of the volume processed by local mills in southeast Alaska, and curtailing it would take a devastating toll on jobs and local communities and businesses.

Both Rayburn and Hall praised the Department of Agriculture for its efforts to make Rural Housing Service eligibility information available on the Internet. To visit the site, click here; included are links to loan program basics, maps of eligible areas and household income levels.

For more information, e-mail Bill Renner at NAHB, or call him at 800-368-5242 x8597.

 


 

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