The National Association of Home Builders testified before
Congress recently praising H.R. 2336, the GREEN Act of 2009, which sets new
green building and sustainability benchmarks for properties that get financial
assistance from the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development.
NAHB PresidentJerry Howardalso left members with a warning: H.R. 2454, the other major piece of climate
change legislation now before Congress, includes requirements that conflict
with H.R. 2336 – making the GREEN Act obsolete before it’s even signed.
“I
am hopeful that this Subcommittee will be able to restore the balance necessary
to truly incentivize green building and preserve affordability as the debate
over climate change continues,” Howard said. “It would be terribly
disappointing to see the good faith effort and collaborative work on the GREEN
Act displaced with unworkable federal mandates as envisioned in H.R. 2454.”
According to NAHB, Howard told lawmakers
on the House Subcommittee on Housing and Community Opportunity that the
association’s members agree with the bill’s approach, which will ensure
cost-effective energy-efficiency improvements to HUD-financed homes. In
accompanying written testimony, Howard detailed the strides NAHB members have
made toward the creation of more sustainable housing stock and the education,
certification and training programs the association has launched to further
that growth.
“We have a major role to play in the
manner in which energy efficiency and sustainable technologies are introduced
into the housing stock,” Howard said. “Despite the downturn, NAHB has not
wavered in its commitment to promoting green building and energy efficiency in
a manner that is affordable and effective, and legitimately improves energy
efficiency for the next generation of housing.”
Howard did ask Congress to rework some
sections of GREEN Act’s text, mostly concerning confusion in the current draft
whether new efficiency requirements apply to Federal Housing Authority-financed
home purchases as well as to direct subsidy programs or competitive grants.
Source: The
National Association of Home Builders
NAHB Pledges Support For GREEN Act
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