NBN Online for the week of August 14, 2006

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In This Issue:

Front Page
Regulators Backing Down From Ditch Oversight
Florida’s Hurricane Season a Time to Wait for Home Sales Recovery
Share Nation's Building News With Your Staff. It's Free.
Layouts for Living
Floor Plans: Affordability, Convenience Come to ‘Main Street’
Coast to Coast
Slim Pickings for Real Estate Vultures
Politics & Government
Days Numbered for Senate to Move on Estate Tax Relief
Mortgage Holdings a Sticking Point for GSE Reform Bill
Economics & Finance
Eye on the Economy: Housing Pulls Down Economic Growth
Legal
Suit Over Discriminatory Building Regs Moves Forward
Free NAHB Moisture Protection Pamphlet for Siding Installers
Register for Sept. 7-8 Construction Law Seminar in San Francisco
Tips
Builder's Tip: Using Sandbags as Concrete-Form Anchors
Business Management
Why You Should Be Concerned About Workplace Harassment
Mobile Office Alarm System Protects Construction Job Sites
BuilderBooks.com: Navigate the Challenges of Land Development
Custom Home Builder of Year Nominations Due Aug. 15
Early Registration for Custom Builder Symposium Ends Soon
Remodelers
Golf Utah for Educated Remodelers Everywhere
Commercial
McGraw-Hill Offers ENR Discount to NAHB Members
Commercial Builders Awards of Excellence Deadline Aug. 18
International
Sign Up for Trade Mission to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico
Thinking Green, Building Green Down Under
Education
CAPS Designation All Over National News, CBS, CNN
Learn More Before NAHB's Fall Board Meeting
Want to Know More About Designations? Ask an Expert
Education Calendar
Environment
Government Regulators Listen to Builder Suggestions
Green Building
Color Drawing Explains Green Building to Home Buyers
Apply for Green Building Awards
Codes and Standards
NAHB Members Reviewing ICC Code Change Proposals
Workforce housing
Apply for 2006 Workforce Housing Awards
Labor
Workers to Be Trained to Help Rebuild New Orleans
Building Products
USG Recycling Gypsum Scrap and Ceiling Panels
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV & DIY This Week
Endowment
Barton Harvey to Give Dunlop Lecture at Harvard
Enter Awards Programs for Community Contributions
Association News
UPS Offers Up to 30% Discount to NAHB Members on Shipping
GM $500 Exclusive Offer for NAHB Members
Find Key Employees Through the NAHB Online Career Center
Fall Board Meets Sept. 13-17 in Salt Lake City
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

Free NAHB Moisture Protection Pamphlet for Siding Installers

Register for Sept. 7-8 Construction Law Seminar in San Francisco

Suit Over Discriminatory Building Regs Moves Forward

NAHB has standing to sue the City of Kyle, Texas over proposed development regulations that the association believes violate the Fair Housing Act, a Federal District Court judge ruled on July 31.

NAHB and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) filed suit in January against Kyle, alleging that the city’s development regulations are excessively stringent and are driving up the cost of housing for many low-income families, disproportionately affecting the community’s African-American and Hispanic citizens.

The lawsuit is part of a groundbreaking partnership between the NAACP, the nation’s oldest and largest civil right organization, and NAHB, which represents more than 225,000 professionals in the housing industry.

Seeking to dismiss the suit, the City of Kyle had challenged NAHB’s standing (its right to bring a lawsuit) under the Fair Housing Act. A federal magistrate, Andrew W. Austin, determined in a June 16 ruling that the NAACP, the Texas NAACP, the Austin NAACP, NAHB and the Home Builders Association of Greater Austin (HBA) did have standing, and that recommendation was upheld at the end of last month by Lee Yeakel, a judge for the Western District of Texas.

“The court finds that plaintiffs HBA and NAHB have alleged sufficient facts to demonstrate associational standing,” Austin wrote in the earlier ruling that was affirmed by the District Court.

“This is an important victory for NAHB and the HBA of Greater Austin,” said Duane Desiderio, NAHB’s staff vice president for legal affairs. “NAHB and the NAACP can now proceed to the merits of our Fair Housing Act claim that the Kyle ordinance is discriminatory in effect and has a disparate impact in pricing minorities out of the housing market.”

The City of Kyle adopted the zoning and subdivision ordinances that are having an adverse impact on its housing costs in November of 2004. Among other things, the ordinances:

  • Require a minimum garage size of 480 square feet
  • Increase the minimum home size from 1,000 square feet to 1,200 square feet
  • Require a masonry exterior
  • Increase the lot size of single-family homes by 20%


These changes have caused the price of a new entry-level home in Kyle to rise from an average price of $100,000 to an average of $138,000, Desiderio said.

“Regardless of intent, the city’s actions make it more difficult for builders to provide housing for disadvantaged minority families, and that is a violation of the Fair Housing Act,” Desiderio said.

For more information, e-mail Blake Smith at NAHB, or call him at 800-368-5242 x8583.


 

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