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SPONSOR: |
Fidel |
DATE TYPED: |
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HB |
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SHORT TITLE: |
Home Inspector Licensing Act |
SB |
589 |
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ANALYST: |
Maloy |
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REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
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FY03 |
FY04 |
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|
|
|
Unknown |
|
Recurring |
Home
Inspector Fund |
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SB 589 relates to SB 101, wherein various state
licensing boards and commissions’ relationship to the Regulation and Licensing
Department (as administratively attached and under direct authority of the
Superintendent for personnel matters) is defined.
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 589
creates a new licensing Act and regulatory board, the Home Inspector Licensing
Act and Board. The purpose of the new law and regulatory body is to provide for
“regulation and supervision of the business of home inspection and evaluation,
including assessing the condition of domestic real estate, providing
comprehensive analysis of the condition of property, and providing necessary
evidence of condition.”
The bill defines “home
inspection” as a “non-invasive, nondestructive inspection for the purpose of
providing a professional opinion of the condition of a building and its
carports and garages, any reasonable accessible installed components and the
operation of the building systems, including the controls normally operated by
the owner of a residential building, such as the heating system, cooling
system, plumbing system, structural components, foundation, roof covering, exterior
and interior components and site aspects as they affect the building.”
Significant Issues
1.
SB 589 proposes that the board
composition should be five members, four of whom are to be home inspectors, and
one of whom is to be a member of the public with no home inspection experience.
2.
The bill establishes the qualifications
that a home inspector board member must possess and the duties the board will
perform, including issuing and renewing licenses, adopting home inspection
practices, codes and standards, and taking disciplinary action against licensees
who do not conduct their business in accordance with the board’s codes and
standards.
3.
The bill similarly sets forth the minimum
requirements / qualifications necessary to be a licensee in the home inspection
field. These include:
a.
Being 18 years of age,
b.
A resident of
c.
Completed a course of study that covers
all components of a residential building, and
d.
Training and experience as deemed
appropriate by the board.
4.
The bill provides for an interim license to be provided
to applicants of good moral character, with a high school diploma (or the
equivalent), with two years of experience and more than 250 inspection
completed, and with a successful score on the national home inspector
examination. Interim licenses are to be
available until
The bill does not
contain an initial, start-up appropriation.
However, the bill does provide a fee schedule for examination,
application, triennial licensure, and administrative expenses. These fees will be paid into the home
inspector fund with the state treasury.
Money in the fund is
to be used by the board to meet necessary expenses incurred in the enforcement
of the provisions of the Home Inspector Licensing Act, in carrying out the
duties imposed by the act, and for the promotion of education and standards of
home inspectors in
All unexpended or
unencumbered balances remaining at the end of each fiscal year shall remain in
the fund for use in accordance with the provisions of the Home Inspectors
Licensing Act.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
This new board will
need to be staffed, likely including a board administrator, a support staff
person—who will need to perform the administrative tasks associated with
licensing and renewals, and a complaints administrator.
As one of 20+ state
licensing boards, is it expected that this board will be grouped with the other
similar professional boards and commissions?
Is this board to be administratively attached to the Regulation and
Licensing Department similar to other state licensing boards?
The Civil Division of
the Attorney General’s Office will likely provide representation to the board,
as a public entity, and the Litigation Division will likely assume
responsibility for administrative prosecutions of complaints.
CONFLICT / RELATIONSHIP
If the Home Inspectors
Licensing Board is to be grouped with the other state licensing boards
currently “attached” to the Regulation and Licensing Department, SB 101 will
likely need to be amended to add this new board as one of the boards whose
administrative relationship to the department is better defined.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
This new board should
be clear in defining the nature of its work and scope of its assessments. This board will not be able to evaluate a
structure’s comprehensive safety, since many key components of the
structure where problems occur are inaccessible for inspection. However, the structural elements that are
accessible will provide a solid general indication of the structure’s overall
health. It simply will not address
everything, and the persons seeking these licensed services need to be clear on
what their expectations should rightly be.
SJM/sb