NBN Online for the week of March 19, 2007

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In This Issue:

Front Page
Builders Testify on Housing Finance System Reform
‘Buy Now’ Advertising Assistance Grants Going Fast. Apply Now.
Some States Emerging From Housing Boom's Dark Shadow
Share Nation's Building News With Your Staff. It's Free.
Coast to Coast
Where the Wolf Comes Knocking: Areas Already in Economic Distress Feel Rise in Housing Foreclosures
Politics & Government
Tax Relief Aimed at Preserving Affordable Housing
Bills Would Help Enlistees Qualify for Affordable Housing
Economics & Finance
Subprime Loan Uncertainties Erode Confidence of Builders
Eye on the Economy: Recession Not Imminent
Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends
Tips
Builders' Tip: Making A Grit-Free Cap for Pneumatic Tools
Design
Vintage Bathtub Folds Up Like a Murphy Bed
King Kong Would Recognize America’s Favorite Building
Regulation
How to Overcome NIMBY Opposition to Your Project
Austin ‘McMansion’ Ordinance Squeezes Home Owners
Sales and Marketing
San Diego Web Site Gives Buyers an Edge
Building Systems
NAHB IBS Show Home Exterior Eats Smog, Is Self-Cleaning
NAHB Offers Educational Resources for Concrete
Multifamily
Market Realities, Emerging Trends at Pillars Conference
Remodelers
NAHB Remodelers Enter Rulemaking Advocacy Fray
New Award Recognizes Aging-in-Place Remodeling Projects
Apply for the NAHB Remodeler of the Month Award
Education
Education Calendar
Green Building
Bank of America Initiative to Address Climate Change
Legal
District Court Upholds Pygmy Owl De-Listing
Workforce housing
Terwilliger Gift to Bring $130 Million for Affordable Housing
MacArthur Grant to Support Study of Impact of Housing
Labor
Students Meet Potential Employers at IBS Job Fair
Building Products
Decorative Concrete Provides a Cutting-Edge Look
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV and DIY This Week
Endowment
Challenge/Build/Grow Initiative Proposals Due by April 16
Association News
1973 NAHB President George Clarke Martin Dies at 85
Get Free 'April Is New Homes Month' Resources Online Now
GM Business Choice, Lowe’s Team Up to Reward NAHB Members
Office Depot Deals: Music to Your Ears
Lock in 2006 Visa/MC Processing Rates. Offer Ends March 31.
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

District Court Upholds Pygmy Owl De-Listing

Years of legal wrangling over the pygmy owl have resulted in yet another decision that favors housing affordability and rejects interference from interest groups that would make wide swaths of land unavailable for development, cost millions of dollars and offer no environmental benefit, NAHB said.

The U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona on March 9 upheld a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service decision to remove the pygmy owl from the list of endangered species, agreeing that the owls living in Arizona are not a separate species and rejecting a petition from the Defenders of Wildlife. In its ruling, the court agreed with NAHB that building new homes will not hurt the population of the owl, which thrives across the border in Mexico.

Last week’s opinion follows a landmark ruling from the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, the most environmentally conscious court in the nation, which determined in 2003 that the initial decision to list pygmy owls was “arbitrary and capricious.”

“We’ve been mired in this argument for 10 years. It’s time for everyone to concede that there is no environmental benefit to the listing, and I am glad the court concurred,” said NAHB President Brian Catalde. “We all agree that endangered species should be protected, but this effort to set aside an unprecedented habitat for an owl that enjoys a wide range to the south and is found there in large numbers was a costly mistake from the outset.”

In Arizona, the Fish and Wildlife Service proposed that 1.2 million acres be set aside as so-called critical habitat for the owl, imposing excessive costs and regulation on home construction. Four years ago, NAHB economists estimated that this unnecessary critical habitat designation would have cut residential construction in the Tucson area by 262 homes annually, reduced local economic activity by $545 million over a 10-year period and deprived local governments of $68.3 million in tax and permit revenue. The designation would have cost 705 jobs in the first year alone and 2,750 over 10 years.

“Litigating cases like these costs thousands and thousands of dollars,” Catalde continued. “But allowing such unjustified designations to stand would be even more costly. The big losers would be the residents of the state who would see home prices and taxes rise and jobs disappear. With this decision, the courts are sending a clear message that the pygmy owl listing is unjustified and it’s time to move forward.”

For more information, e-mail Calli Schmidt at NAHB, or call her at 800-368-5242 x8132.


 

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