NBN Online for the week of July 30, 2007

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In This Issue:

Front Page
Mortgage Credit Standard Tightening May Be Near an End
Builders Abandon Business as Usual to Weather Downturn
$500,000 Still Available in ‘Buy Now’ Grant Funds, Apply Today
Coast to Coast
How Hard Will Tight Credit Hit?
Housing Forum
Just the Right to Build a House in California Can Cost $200,000
Local Land Use Controls May Violate the Fair Housing Act
Politics & Government
Pennsylvania Town's Immigration Law Overturned
Traffic Congestion Getting Worse on State Highways
City Mayors Pursue Climate Protection Efforts
Economics & Finance
New Home Sales Slip in June as Demand Slackens
Proposal to Lower Conforming Loan Limits Draws Fire
Study Shows New Housing Pays Its Way in California
Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends
Tips
Builders’ Tip: A Tool to Find Circle Centers — Spot On
50Plus Housing
Earn the CAASH Designation One of Two Ways
Multifamily
Action Needed on Proposed Carried Interest Tax Hike
Remodelers
Plan to Attend the Remodeling Show in Las Vegas
Building Systems
Learn How Others Build, Take PCA Builders Survey by Aug. 3
Sales
Improve Your Closing Style: Little Things Mean a Lot
Enter The Nationals Sales and Marketing Awards by Sept. 28
Education
Education Calendar
Green Building
Green Building Conference Seminar Proposals Due Aug. 10
Safety
‘Safety Program’ Saves Lives, Protects the Bottom Line
Workforce housing
Decent Housing Improves Children's Health, Education
Building Products
Owens Corning Tells Home Owners How to Save Energy
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on DIY, Fine Living and HGTV
Endowment
Stuard Scholarship Fund Announces 15 Winners
Association News
Drive Away With a Shiny New $500 GM Offer
Special Offer for NAHB Members on the Dell ATG D620 Notebook
Get One Month Free Credit Card Processing With Solveras
Introducing the Hertz Green Collection. Reserve and Conserve.
Get Free CD of Customer Service Forms From Biz Forms and Checks
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

Traffic Congestion Getting Worse on State Highways

City Mayors Pursue Climate Protection Efforts

Pennsylvania Town's Immigration Law Overturned

A federal judge in Pennsylvania issued a permanent injunction on July 26 on a Hazleton, Pa., town ordinance aimed at penalizing businesses that hire illegal immigrants and landlords who rent to them.

The decision casts doubt on the legality of similar laws passed by some 100 municipalities attempting to restrict illegal immigration in response to failed federal reform efforts. U.S. Senators voted 46 to 53 against a procedural motion on June 28 to move toward a final vote on the immigration bill (S.1639).

U.S. District Judge James Munley ruled that Hazleton's "Illegal Immigration Relief Act" was unlawful because it tried to regulate the country's immigration policy and violated procedural due process protections under the U.S. Constitution.

“This ruling shows the need for federal lawmakers to work towards a comprehensive solution to address immigration concerns with one federal law, instead of hundreds of different state and local requirements that will create a tangle of regulatory confusion for employers,” said Jerry Howard, executive vice president and CEO of NAHB.

The Hazleton ordinance, the first passed in the country, thrust the mayor and his town onto the national stage. Mayor Louis Barletta began searching for ways to reign in illegal immigration last year after two illegal immigrants were charged in a fatal shooting.  Barletta said a petition on the Internet drafted by an anti-illegal immigration activist in San Bernardino, Calif., provided a template for his ordinance.

Barletta said that he will appeal. Several legal observers predicted that the issue would be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Since last year, politicians from Massachusetts to California have been drawing up laws and ordinances to limit illegal immigrants' access to jobs, housing and government services.

Arizona's Democratic Gov. Janet Napolitano signed a law early this month requiring all employers to ensure that job candidates are legal residents. The Board of Supervisors in Prince William County (Northern Virginia) voted unanimously to permit its police force to ask residents their status as immigrants. If they are found to be in the country illegally, then county police can promptly arrest them and send them on to the local Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) unit to initiate deportation proceedings.

The challenge to Hazleton's ordinance was led by the American Civil Liberties Union and other civil-rights and Latino advocacy groups.

For more information, e-mail Carlos Gutierrez at NAHB, or call him at 800-368-5242 x8242.


 

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