State of New Jersey Commission of Investigation The Good,
the Bad
and the Ugly New-Home Construction in New Jersey
Introduction
The Commission opened an investigation into new-home construction and inspection
issues in July 2002 after receipt of a referral from the Office of the United
States Attorney in Newark involving complaints filed by new-home buyers. In
subsequent interviews with Commission staff, the buyers referenced a spectrum of
problems in new-home construction, including shoddy and negligent workmanship,
widespread inspection irregularities, potentially dangerous building code
violations, and an unresponsive system of remediation. As the inquiry
progressed, the range and volume of these complaints, together with the fact
that they involved different housing developments and different builders in
multiple New Jersey municipalities, suggested a broad and disturbing pattern.
Rigorous investigation and analysis confirmed an astonishing statewide panorama
of waste, fraud and abuse. Casting a broad net that reached into every corner of
New Jersey, the Commission found a system in which the public trust has been
thoroughly shaken by graft, by greed and incompetence and by the failure of
government to fulfill its fundamental duty to protect the safety and welfare of
citizens. This is a system mired in the past, a system utterly incompatible with
21st century standards and expectations, a system that, in many respects, is as
fractured and as imperiled by structural flaws as the problem-plagued homes it
has produced.
This document represents the final report of the Commission’s investigation,
incorporating a comprehensive summary of findings and a detailed set of
recommendations for systemic reform. It is based upon a thorough investigative
record developed over the course of more than two years, including interviews
and sworn testimony from scores of witnesses, field surveillances, accounting
analyses, and examination of thousands of pages of documentary evidence obtained
from builders, homeowners, local construction code officials and regulatory
personnel. Overall, 234 subpoenas were issued, more than half calling for the
production of records and documents. Sixty-four individuals provided sworn
testimony before the Commission in private executive session. In addition,
Commission staff conducted nearly 400 field interviews.
The investigation focused initially on the inspection process for new homes
but progressed to include the new-home warranty system as well as the activities
and
performance of builders and developers, engineers, subcontractors, laborers, and
state and local regulatory offices. The investigation spanned all of New
Jersey’s 21 counties, and during its course, the Commission and its staff had
direct or indirect contact with thousands of homeowners who experienced
wide-ranging and sometimes harrowing problems with new homes they had purchased.
Complaint scenarios were subjected to intensive scrutiny, and when the facts
were established and carefully analyzed, failures of systemic proportions were
apparent across the entire arena of new-home construction and inspections.
The Commission’s findings were presented during five days of public hearings held in three segments over the course of nearly a year. The first hearing, held November 18-19, 2003, delineated problems faced by homeowners who had purchased homes fraught with significant construction-related defects. This hearing also traced the rise in defaults by builders who fail to complete construction of new homes, leaving buyers adrift in significant financial losses without adequate remedy. Weakness and dysfunction in the structure and operation of new-home warranty programs were featured in a subsequent hearing, held January 21, 2004. The third and final set of hearings, held October 12-13, 2004, focused on obstacles faced by builders and inspectors during construction, on the adequacy of government oversight and regulation, and on a variety of proposals for systemic reform. Throughout the hearing process, 58 witnesses testified and dozens of documentary exhibits were presented. Transcripts of these proceedings form a critical supplement to this report.
On one level, the systemic problems in new-home construction are evidenced by
tangible defects that are emblematic of substandard workmanship and lax quality
control from foundation to roof. Numerous examples of flagrant
construction deficiencies, including structural and mechanical flaws – obvious,
in some instance, even to the untrained eye – were found in single homes and in
housing developments, large and small, high-priced and affordable, in suburban
and urban communities across New Jersey. On a more insidious level, the
Commission found that new-home construction is prone to an assortment of
questionable and ineffective practices that play out against a backdrop of lax
governmental oversight.
The construction code inspection and enforcement process, in particular, is
fraught with serious shortcomings. Among the most egregious is the fact that
despite the
presence of significant defects in newly built homes – including structural
weaknesses that constitute potentially hazardous conditions – certificates of
occupancy have been issued by local governmental authorities, clearing the way
for the transfer of ownership and liability to unsuspecting buyers. Under a
properly functioning inspection system, defects of this nature should be
detected by inspectors prior to closing and, if identified as code violations,
should forestall the final transaction.
The Commission found that in many instances, the required inspections either were never performed or were performed in an incomplete, haphazard fashion for various reasons, including pressure from builders to move quickly from one phase of a project to another. In extreme situations, forged and fraudulent certificates of occupancy have been generated by builder representatives in order to speed the closing of sales with buyers who, for their part, have been led only to believe that everything is in proper order. The Commission’s investigation revealed that local construction offices and personnel accepted gifts and other inducements from representatives of builders and/or developers, violating prohibitions against such activities and tainting the public’s perception of their ability to perform a vital function as dispassionate sentinels over the process.
New Jersey’s residential code inspection and enforcement process also has
been subverted by the failure of some municipal governments to dedicate adequate
available resources to the inspection process. The Commission found that while
hundreds of millions of dollars are collected from builders and developers
annually in the form of fees to obtain local construction permits, only a
portion of this revenue is used to underwrite the hiring and training of
qualified inspection personnel.
Consumers, meanwhile, caught in the middle of these disturbing circumstances,
often find no satisfactory way to protect or salvage their own interests.
New-home
“warranty” programs – so-called because ostensibly they provide guarantees of
repair and remediation – frequently fail to fulfill their promise, defeated by
delay and obfuscation at the hands of an industry that has actually coined a
term to describe this cynical practice –“lulling.”
Ultimately, what was intended as a fair and equitable method of recourse for
consumers serves instead as the foundation of adversarial contests pitting
ill-equipped
home-buyers against powerful professionals with deep pockets. Moreover, having
invested trust and confidence – and tax dollars – in the presumed efficacy and
fairness of state and local government oversight and assistance in this regard,
victimized consumers instead find themselves caught in a bureaucratic maze
where inertia and inaction seem to be the norm. Indeed, one of the most
disturbing aspects of this frazzled and impaired system is the complete absence
of an effective governmental entity charged specifically with assisting
home-buying consumers and looking out for their best interests.
The playing field was thrown further out of kilter for consumers when, during
the course of this investigation, a state appeals court ruled that once a
certificate of
occupancy is issued for a newly-built home, any code violations discovered
subsequently become the responsibility of the buyer – even if they were the work
of the builder. On appeal, this decision was reversed by the New Jersey Supreme
Court in January 2005. DKM Corp. v. Twp. of Montgomery. 182 NJ 296 (2005).
The Commission is mindful that the residential development and construction
industry is an integral component of New Jersey’s overall economy. This industry
provides gainful employment for thousands of workers, anchors and enriches the
property-tax base in many communities, and offers the citizens of this state an
opportunity to share in the American dream. It is also true that not all
builders are problem builders, not all code inspectors are corrupt or
incompetent, and not all complaints and claims filed by home-buyers are valid.
However, as the findings of the Commission’s investigation clearly demonstrate,
this industry – as well as those responsible for regulating it – find themselves
today at a critical crossroad. Just as the consequences of runaway developmental
sprawl in recent
years have prompted significant land-use reforms, the very real problems
inherent in the system of new-home construction and inspections require
concerted attention and meaningful change as well.
To their credit, certain elements of both the residential construction industry
and the regulatory community in recent months have expressed recognition of the
troubling issues associated with maintaining the status quo. In response, they
have taken it upon themselves to effectuate certain changes within their own
spans of control. The Commission applauds this trend and herein presents to the
Governor, the Legislature and the appropriate regulatory agencies a
comprehensive package of reform recommendations grounded in the express findings
of this investigation. The Commission is grateful to all of those who cooperated
with and assisted in
this important effort – the dozens of concerned citizens; government officials
at the local, county, state and federal level; technical experts;
representatives of the construction and building industry; and most prominently,
new-home buyers. The scope of their participation and the urgency of their
interest in examining and, where necessary, attempting to fix some of the
difficult problems at hand in new-home construction combine to constitute a
strong message that responsible authorities should heed.
Summary of Findings
The Commission’s key findings fall broadly into four major areas:
• Deficient and Incomplete Construction
• Subversion of Inspections and Code Enforcement
• Lax Government Oversight and Regulation
• Inadequate Consumer Protection and Remediation
Deficient and Incomplete Construction
Shoddy Workmanship / Rampant Defects
■ New-home construction in New Jersey is vulnerable to, and has been tarnished
by, a wide range of physical defects that beg fundamental
questions of skill, competence and quality control.
■ The gamut of construction deficiencies is far more serious and complex than
the normal run of “nail pops,” drywall cracks, loose fixtures
and other easily-remedied cosmetic flaws common to new homes, and includes:
• Missing, broken, disfigured and/or improperly installed walls, beams, joists,
decking, roof trusses and other structural supports
• Cracked, crumbling foundations, and/or improper foundation anchorage 2 See
Exhibit NCI-1391, Summary of Key Findings, Appendix at p. A-2
• Homes built smaller by hundreds of square feet than specified in architectural
plans and, conversely, homes built larger than specified plans – a situation
that can result in a potentially dangerous structural condition known as
over-spanning
• Inappropriate and/or improperly installed and vented heating/air-conditioning
systems
• Faulty plumbing
• Flawed electrical systems
• Basements, crawl spaces and habitable areas prone to flooding, moisture
intrusion and/or toxic mold
• Site engineering deficiencies, including problems with drainage, collapsed
roadways, sink holes and premature failure
of storm-drainage systems
■ Deficiencies of this nature are neither rare nor isolated and could constitute
potentially life-threatening hazards. In some instances, they are
an outgrowth of, or are directly attributable to, low-quality materials and/or
inferior construction.
■ Entire subdivisions consisting of hundreds of single-family detached homes,
some ranging in price above $300,000, were found to be plagued
with assorted structural and mechanical problems; in the case of one 400-home
development, surveys showed the same defect to be present in every
house on every street.
■ In the worst individual cases, homeowners discovered that the new homes they
had purchased came equipped with structurally unsound
ceilings and roofs; façades unfastened from support structures; wobbly, moving
walls; walls fouled by sewage from cracked pipes; improperly
installed heating systems venting poisonous exhaust, including carbon monoxide,
directly into living areas; flooded crawl spaces; and collapsed
porches.
Lax Construction Practices and Supervision
■ New-home construction in New Jersey, as elsewhere, is dominated today by
large, highly competitive corporate enterprises known as
“production builders” whose profit/loss picture is defined to a great extent by
two key factors: the ability to achieve economic efficiencies and
adherence to rigid construction deadlines. Indeed, it is generally the practice
within the industry to reward management-level employees based
primarily upon the speed and volume of production at residential construction
sites. These factors, however, constitute pressure points that
have created the circumstances for problematic construction practices and
questionable supervision.
■ The bulk of new-home construction – that is, the actual practice of putting
hammer to nail – is not always performed by direct employees of
the builder whose name is affixed to the marketing and sales effort, but by
teams and levels of subcontractors who employ laborers with no direct
link to the builder. The vast majority of these subcontractors are neither
licensed nor regulated by state or local governmental authorities.
■ Although builders often assign their own personnel to serve on-site as
construction project managers, there is no uniform system of certification
and/or licensure to ensure that qualified individuals are on site to provide
adequate supervision of the work performed.
■ Supervisory problems are exacerbated by the fact that major segments of the
new-home construction industry are plagued by an extraordinarily
high personnel turn-over rate for on-site project managers, a situation that
severely undermines accountability when construction deficiencies are
discovered.
■ Evolving technology and constantly changing construction methods and
materials require specially trained and skilled expertise on-site at all
times. The Commission found instances in which subcontractors employ laborers
who are put to work, without proper supervision, on construction
tasks for which they are unskilled or otherwise ill-suited.
■ In recent years, the labor force in new-home construction has consisted
increasingly of unskilled immigrants, many of whom are
undocumented aliens who speak only their native non-English language, thus
layering a communications problem onto the already challenging
issue of ensuring adequate, skilled project supervision.
Builder Default
■ Unscrupulous, unqualified and/or inept builders are able to abandon
construction of homes in midstream or fail to even break ground, taking
down-payments with them.
■ Builders who default in one community can easily reorganize under a different
corporate or trade name and continue conducting business as
usual in communities elsewhere in New Jersey.
■ Short of pursuing such delinquencies through civil litigation in the courts,
victimized home-buyers have little recourse because New Jersey
lacks appropriate and effective legal and regulatory remedies to protect
consumer interests in cases where builders abandon legal and contractual
obligations.
Subversion of Inspections and Code Enforcement
Deficiencies in new-home construction in New Jersey are enabled and exacerbated
by an inspection and code enforcement system whose ability to function
properly has been weakened by insufficient resources, by inspectors unskilled
and unschooled in changing technology and by the sheer volume of construction
across the state. In extreme instances, the integrity and credibility of this
system have been eroded by incompetence, conflicts of interest and outright
corruption.
The Commission found that these and other disturbing issues are emblematic of a
culture of negligence in which builder representatives and inspectors –
operating either in league or based upon the mistaken assumption that one or the
other is on top of the job –minimize, ignore or fail to detect blatant
construction defects.
The serious problems in this area are driven by a number of key phenomena,
includingAbuse of the Inspection Process
■ Local construction office personnel and other municipal officials have
accepted gifts of liquor, food, tickets to sporting events, holiday parties,
expense-paid golf outings, construction materials, large appliances and other
inducements from builders/developers. At the same time,
builders/developers seeking favorable treatment have even offered cash to local
inspection personnel.
■ Inspection personnel and builder employees who cooperated in this
investigation described various artifices used by unscrupulous officials to
cast the appearance of legitimate oversight. These include so-called “drive by”
or “windshield” inspections in which inspectors falsely certify
the required paperwork without ever exiting their vehicles to conduct even
minimal inspections.
■ In the worst instances, builder representatives have completely circumvented
the official inspection process by issuing forged and
fraudulent certificates of occupancy to unsuspecting buyers in order to speed
the sale of new homes, some rife with structural flaws and code
violations.
Inadequate Resources, Training and Coordination
■ In many municipalities, New Jersey’s new-home inspection and code enforcement
processes have been thoroughly undermined and weakened
by insufficient numbers of qualified personnel both to perform the actual
inspections and to ensure that inspections are conducted properly and
appropriately, especially during local construction booms. The resource crunch
is further exacerbated by the need in many municipalities to
conduct repeated re-inspections of residential construction projects found to be
rife with structural and other defects. Additionally, it is not unusual
for the same individual to be responsible for carrying out inspections in
multiple municipalities. The Commission’s investigation revealed
instances where, given the multiplicity of employment venues, it would have been
physically impossible for one individual to perform competent
inspections and/or to properly oversee construction offices.
■ Although local governmental units in New Jersey collect hundreds of millions
of dollars annually from builders and developers in the form of
permit fees for residential construction, some municipal construction offices
use only a portion of the revenue for its statutorily intended
purpose: to fund local construction code enforcement offices, including the
hiring of adequate numbers of competent inspectors.
■ Even when serious construction deficiencies, including code violations, are
found in new homes, there is little in the way of adequate
follow-through on enforcement to ensure that the same construction mistakes,
shortcomings and problems do not occur again.
■ New Jersey’s Uniform Construction Code (UCC) has not been updated in more than
a decade and, thus, its provisions and requirements in some
areas have not kept pace with the current state of residential construction.
■ UCC requirements often are subject to interpretation from one job site to
another, from one municipality to another, and from one code official or
inspector to another, a situation that has resulted in the inconsistent
application of a regulatory framework that was intended to provide
uniform protection for the safety and welfare of the public. The Commission’s
investigation revealed examples in which common
construction deficiencies were repeated in different developments in different
municipalities throughout the state by the same builder. In some
instances, the deficiencies were picked up by the inspection process; in others,
they were missed.
Obstacles to Inspection / Inappropriate Use of Inspectors
■ Although the role of local building inspectors is to ensure compliance
with the UCC, some builders were found to rely inappropriately upon
municipal inspectors as monitors and enforcers of quality control during the
construction process. Conversely, the investigation also revealed that
some local inspectors rely on the quality of the builder to meet the UCC
standards rather than on actual inspections of the work performed.
■ Inspectors often have difficulty conducting and completing proper inspections
and/or re-inspections because structural, mechanical and other
key components have been rendered inaccessible by the installation of sheathing,
sheetrock or other construction materials.
■ Failure to require house-specific construction plans on-site for use by local
inspectors during actual inspections undermines the accuracy and
thoroughness of inspections.
■ Subsequent changes in, or damage to, construction following performance of an
inspection may go undetected.
Lax Government Oversight and Regulation Inadequate and/or Nonexistent Oversight
of Builders,Subcontractors and Professional Trades
■ In order to do business in New Jersey, residential builders need only pay a
$200 fee and submit a brief registration form to the New Jersey
Department of Community Affairs (DCA), the state agency responsible for
regulating the industry. There are no requirements that builders
demonstrate construction proficiency, possess sufficient financial backing or,
until recently, even undergo criminal background checks.
■ Although architects, electricians and plumbers are subject to licensing
requirements and oversight by state-level professional boards, no such
regulatory or certification mechanism exists for other trades that are critical
to the quality of new-home construction, including those that
specialize in structural framing, roofing and masonry.
■ Builders often establish Limited Liability Corporations (LLCs) which typically
stay in existence for a period of time after the last home in a
development is completed. This arrangement makes it difficult for homeowners to
obtain meaningful redress in the event of problems.
■ Under the current statutory and regulatory configuration, builders responsible
for defective construction are able to reorganize under
different corporate names and thus evade scrutiny by appropriate governmental
authorities.
■ The Commission found that in terms of meaningful oversight, the regulatory
process provides little recourse with regard to problem builders
other than resorting to the ultimate step of revoking their DCA registrations.
Inconsistent Record-Keeping / Lack of Data on Builder and Subcontractor
Performance
■ The Commission found widespread discrepancies in the quality and availability
of official records related to residential construction projects at
the municipal level. In some instances, substantial numbers of key documents,
including sealed architectural blueprints, construction
inspection reports and violation notices for residential developments could not
be obtained from the appropriate municipal agencies, despite repeated
attempts to locate them. In addition, the Commission found that required plans
were not kept on site for many of the problem-plagued
developments.
■ Neither the state nor its county and local government units maintains a
centralized, easily accessible repository of data and information related to
performance by builders and subcontractors available to the public. Such a
system leaves many prospective home-buyers in the dark with regard to
the integrity and track record of the builders to whom they will entrust what
often amounts to the single largest financial investment of their lives.
Inordinate Delays in Disciplinary Actions
■ During the course of the investigation, the Commission found that the lag time
between the filing of a complaint against an inspector and
subsequent disciplinary action taken, if any, is often excessive. As a result,
inspectors who have been confirmed to have been involved in
serious job-performance defalcations have continued to inspect additional homes
without undergoing adequate remedial education and/or re-training.
In some extreme cases, offending inspectors ultimately were removed from their
positions, but not before they had continued to inspect
numerous homes.
Problems in Planned Real Estate Developments
■ The Commission discovered a serious gap in the regulatory framework for
planned real estate developments – so-called “gated” or “private”
communities – governed by homeowners’ associations. Despite the increasing
prevalence of such communities in New Jersey, there are no
laws to ensure proper transition between builders and these homeowners’
associations upon the completion of construction of such developments.
■ Further, after transition, homeowners in planned real estate developments must
assume responsibility for maintenance of common
areas not covered by warranty programs or by municipal bonding requirements.
Thus, the burden and cost of maintaining streets, sidewalks,
water drainage, etc. – once strictly the domain of municipal government –must be
borne by homeowners in such communities. During the precompletion
stage, homeowners can find themselves at a serious disadvantage in the event
problems are discovered because the builder
retains control of the association until a significant percentage of the homes
are actually sold.
Inadequate Consumer Protection and Recourse
New Jersey lacks an effective, responsive and meaningful system of
safeguards to protect the interests of new-home buyers confronted with defective
construction and to ensure that these consumers have reasonable access to fair
and equitable recourse when the situation demands it.
Although pieces of such a system do exist, the Commission found that, to a large
extent, they merely constitute an incomplete promise wrapped in bureaucratic red
tape, fraught with needless complexity and biased in favor of the industry.
Although the Department of Community Affairs, for example, houses a Bureau of
Homeowner Protection, this entity, for many, is a consumer-oriented watchdog in
name only. The bottom line for all too many consumers under the present system:
confusion, misinformation and, ultimately, the prospect of months of legalistic
wrangling and uncertainty plus thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket
expenditures to resolve and remediate problems for which they bear no
responsibility. The significant systemic problems include:
Flawed New-Home Warranty Program
In 1979, New Jersey became the only state in the nation to require that
new-home construction be covered by a warranty system, with builders having the
option of offering coverage to homebuyers through a plan administered by the
State of New Jersey through the Department of Community Affairs or a private
plan administered by one of four New Jersey-approved warranty providers. What
began as a system designed to ensure quality construction and customer
satisfaction, however, has devolved into a loophole-ridden mechanism that ill
serves the best interests of consumers in the following ways:
■ There is a limited time-frame within which actual coverage is provided. Under
the standard 10-year warranty, builders are required to
undertake necessary repairs and correct most deficiencies throughout a new home
for a period of only one year following completion of sale.
Mechanical and structural components are covered through the end of the second
year. For years three through 10, warranty coverage is only
provided for major structural defects, which are defined as those defects
discovered in major load-bearing portions of a home’s structure that
vitally affect, or are imminently likely to vitally affect, the use of the home
for residential purposes. Under the rules as currently written, a home
would have to sustain actual damage or be near total collapse before warranty
coverage would become effective.
■ Buyers of new homes are provided with inadequate and confusing information
with regard to their rights and the methods of recourse
available under the standard warranty, making navigation of the process
extremely difficult for the average homeowner.
■ In order to trigger actual coverage under the new-home warranty program, a
homeowner must file a request for warranty service with the
3 See Exhibit NCI-250b, New Home Warranty Request for Dispute Settlement
Process, Appendix at p. A-3. 21
warranty provider. For their part, builders sometimes deliberately delay
responding to homeowner complaints until the warranty period has
expired, leaving the homeowner without a remedy. This practice, known as
“lulling,” often results in lapsed filing deadlines for pursuing remedies
under warranty coverage and manifests itself in lingering
constructiondeficiencies and other problems that remain unaddressed
indefinitely.
■ The burden of proof to verify the existence of a defect is on the homeowner,
who often is required to incur the considerable expense of
hiring professionals, i.e. architects, engineers and/or attorneys to prove
claims.
■ In the event homeowners choose to pursue litigation as opposed to arbitration
as a remedy, they often incur considerable expense related to
the cost of legal fees and the hiring of technical experts to proceed against
the builder, even if it is proven that the builder is at fault. Homeowners
often do not possess sufficient resources to pursue such a course of action.
■ The process of effecting actual repairs under the new-home warranty can be
lengthy, subjecting homeowners to the inconvenience of repeated
attempts by builders to remedy warrantable problems. In some instances,
homeowners have experienced additional damage to other areas of their
homes during incompetent efforts to repair the initial problem.
■ In cases of monetary settlement, warranty companies attempt to negotiate the
lowest possible settlement, making use of high-pressure
tactics to persuade homeowners to sign off on patently inequitable settlements
which may not cover the full cost of the targeted repairs.
Although the Commission identified serious shortcomings in both the public and
private warranty plans, lack of regulatory oversight looms as a particularly
egregious
problem with regard to the private-plan arena, even though most large builders
utilize private-plan warranties and approximately 75 percent of all new homes
are covered by that type of plan.
The lack of proper oversight of private warranty plans is symbolized by the fact
that for years, they have been the purview of a single person at the State
Department of Community Affairs. In addition, there exists no formal procedure
for receipt or handling of complaints against private-plan warranty providers
that come to the state’s attention, and the state has no power of sanction short
of revoking the ability of these entities to conduct business here. The
oversight issue is further complicated by the fact that all current private-plan
warranty providers are located beyond New Jersey’s boundaries.
All of these factors have combined to foster an atmosphere of bias in favor of
builders and warranty providers and has burdened new-home buyers with greater
costs, both financially and in the form of frustration, in obtaining
satisfactory and timely repairs.
Dysfunctional Arbitration Process
When builders dispute the validity of claims filed under the new-home warranty,
homeowners may request the services of an arbitrator in an effort to resolve the
outstanding issues. Although designed to provide consumers with a practical and
reasonable alternative to litigation – indeed, those who request arbitration
must relinquish their right to file suit – the process is encumbered with
shortcomings and irregularities in several key areas:
■ The Commission discovered evidence suggesting financial and personal
connections and other conflicts of interest between builders and
warranty plan providers in one of the two arbitration services utilized in New
Jersey. The Commission learned of one instance in which
representatives of this arbitration service actually performed informal
inspections for a warranty provider while simultaneously providing
arbitration services for that same warranty provider.
■ The actual hands-on process of conducting arbitrations is prone to
inconsistency and a lack of meticulousness. Examination of arbitrator
information revealed lack of appropriate and necessary detail, and, in some
instances, a complete absence of records memorializing the
arbitration process. In part, this is a result of inadequate training and
accountability, but it is also a reflection of the problematic way in which
arbitrators are compensated. They are paid fixed fees regardless of the nature,
number and complexity of alleged construction deficiencies – a
negative incentive that frustrates and undermines the ultimate goal of the
arbitration exercise: the conduct of a fair and complete review of all
unresolved issues.
■ The state warranty plan and one of the four currently-approved private-plan
warranty providers utilize the services of New Jersey’s Office
of Dispute Settlement (ODS) in the New Jersey Office of the Public Defender to
handle arbitrations. However, this approach does not provide
an avenue of appeal.
■ Within the private-plan warranties, the arbitration process in New Jersey is
subject to minimal regulatory oversight, evidenced as follows:
• The Commission found that one arbitration service handling cases in New Jersey
was not even registered to do business in
the state.
• An arbitrator who had conducted more than 300 arbitration proceedings between
1998 and 2001 was not certified.
• Personal and/or professional relationships between arbitrators and builders
that could have been detected with a minimum of
scrutiny were not known to regulators.
Limited Recourse for Municipalities
Just as home-buyers routinely encounter obstacles in safeguarding their
interests in the face of problem builders, municipal government agencies
sometimes face similar circumstances, such as:
■ In instances where builders repeatedly fail to complete street paving, curb
installations and other infrastructure improvements required under
the terms of a development permit granted by a municipality – and then
subsequently apply for additional development permits in the same
community – local officials have no statutory authority to deny such
applications on the grounds of prior non-performance.
■ Although builders are required to place funds in bonded escrow accounts as a
backup to cover the cost of infrastructure improvements, the
system is structured in such a way that municipalities have difficulty gaining
access to the funds without expensive and protracted litigation.
Even in instances where the municipality gains access to the funds, with the
passage of time, they often constitute amounts insufficient to cover the
cost of necessary improvements.
Referrals and Recommendations
The Commission refers the findings of this investigation to the following
government agencies for whatever action they deem appropriate:
The Governor and Legislature of New Jersey
Office of the New Jersey Attorney General, Division of Criminal Justice
Office of the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs
Offices of the County Prosecutors of New Jersey
Office of the United States Attorney
* * *
The Commission’s findings demonstrate a critical need for officials at all
levels of government in New Jersey to take steps that will safeguard the quality
and integrity of new-home construction in this state. Pursuant to that goal, the
Commission has fashioned a detailed set of recommendations calling for statutory
and regulatory reforms designed to provide adequate oversight of construction,
strengthen the inspection and enforcement process, and ensure a greater measure
of protection for consumers who find themselves victimized by incompetence,
corruption and/or unresponsive remediation mechanisms, such as the new-home
warranty program.
Given the broad range of weaknesses and abuses identified in this investigation,
the Commission urges that any consequent legislative and regulatory reforms be
cast in such as way as to be applicable to all new-home construction in New
Jersey, without limit to type of residence or size of project. The Commission is
mindful that, during the course of its investigation, a number of initial steps
toward stronger oversight and accountability in this arena were undertaken by
the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs (DCA) through its various
divisions and offices, and by elements of the new-home construction industry
itself. The reforms proposed herein would provide the state and its localities
with significant additional tools to protect the public interest. In many
instances, DCA joins with the Commission in supporting and proposing the
recommendations outlined below. Ultimately, the Commission is constrained to
point out that, even with explicit
and substantive statutory and regulatory changes, there is no substitute for the
exercise of common sense, civic responsibility and awareness by those involved
in the process in the discharge of their duties on behalf of homebuyers.
1. Government Oversight and Regulation of the Construction
Process
The Commission makes the following recommendations for legislative and
regulatory reform to provide and strengthen oversight and accountability of the
newhome
construction process in New Jersey:
Proposed Legislation
Licensing and Certification
Legislation should be enacted to require on-site presence of DCAlicensed/
certified construction superintendents (persons responsible for
construction) and trade supervisors (persons responsible for trades) based on
experience, technical training and testing.
Penalties and sanctions should be authorized for use against these licensed
individuals, including suspension and revocation, for failure to perform the
job.
Mandatory continuing education for construction superintendents/trade
supervisors should be a requirement of the licensing/certification process.
Collection of Key Builder Information
Applicants for builder registration (all officers, directors, stockholders
and principal employees) should be required to provide social security numbers
in
order to facilitate the collection of background information, including criminal
histories and bankruptcy information.
Certification of Application for Certificate of Occupancy
Certification language on the Application for Certificate of Occupancy should
be attested to by a DCA-licensed construction superintendent familiar with the
construction of the home, subjecting affiant to revocation of license for
knowingly filing a false document, and subjecting the registered builder to
monetary penalties.
Strengthen Criminal Penalties
The statutory definition of the crime of official misconduct should be
expanded to include such actions as those of a code official/inspector who
knowingly fails to perform inspections or who conducts them in such a reckless
manner as to nullify the purpose of the inspection. In such instances,
code officials/inspectors shall not actually have to receive a benefit or intend
to injure or deprive another of a benefit to be guilty of such offense.
Criminal statutes should be expanded to provide for penalties and fines to
builders/developers, or their representatives, who confer or offer to confer
anything of value or benefit on any municipal or state government official,
employee or inspector, or if the official, employee or inspector accepts same
in connection with building inspections. This prohibition should extend to any
benefit including cash, gifts, building materials, appliances, meals,
sporting activities, holiday parties, trips, money, gratuities, or anything else
of value.
Suspension of Licenses
A state or municipal building inspector or official should be subject to
suspension for a minimum of 30 days and a maximum of 180 days and face
possible license suspension for the same period of time if he/she becomes
knowledgeable of a situation in which a home has passed inspection or has
received a certificate of occupancy despite failing to meet state building code
requirements, and fails to submit this information to the DCA in writing
within 30 days.
Funding of Construction Offices
All municipal construction/inspection departments should be funded by
“rider.” Presently, New Jersey Budget Law provides for two methods of
accounting for fees collected: (1) Dedication by Budget, under which revenue
from fees is placed in the general fund and re-allocated annually to the
construction office based on budgeted items; and (2) Dedication by Rider,
which requires municipalities to establish trust funds. Under such
arrangements, income and expenses related to construction activities are
specifically dedicated to the trust for exclusive use in code enforcement
activities. Currently, 45 municipalities are authorized to operate via
Dedication by Rider, although only 21 have chosen to do so.
Code of Ethics
Legislation should be enacted to require that a code of ethics be promulgated
for legislative and governmental agents (“lobbyists”), an influential sector
affecting new-home construction legislation and the regulatory process.While
statutory changes recently have addressed other issues involving
legislative and governmental agents, no code of ethics has been enacted for this
key industry.
Registration of Corporate Entities
All entities involved in new-home construction in New Jersey, including
builders, contractors, subcontractors and arbitration and warranty plan
providers, should be required to complete, maintain and keep current the State
Treasury, Division of Revenue’s Public Record Filing For New Business
Entity form that includes the designation of a registered agent and registered
office within this state for the service of process (subpoena) for any legal
action or inquiry, civil, criminal or otherwise. Moreover, proof of such filing
should be required during the application process to obtain a building permit
or to provide warranty or arbitration services.
Proposed Regulatory Reforms
Independent Inspections
Re-inspection for remedial work related to significant code violations should
be handled by an individual other than the inspector who failed to detect the
original violations. In order to confer integrity upon the process, the state
should step in where necessary and proper to conduct such inspections
through the appropriate DCA regional office
In instances where homeowners are entitled to timely and effective
remediation due to a builder’s defalcations, it is unfair and inappropriate for
the builder’s own employees or representatives to evaluate, inspect and
determine what requires repair. In such instances, an independent, third-party
engineer, hired by DCA, should be retained at a builder’s expense to inspect and
design fixes in the case of remediation work.
Complaint Referral Procedures
Complaints against local officials should be memorialized in writing and
filed with the appropriate authorities in DCA. Currently, there is no formal
requirement.
A formal complaint referral procedure should be implemented by DCA so that
its new-home warranty and code enforcement units will be linked in terms of
the ability to share, analyze and act upon this critical information.
Builder Non-Compliance
DCA should maintain a list of builders that have accumulated any number of
confirmed code-compliance defalcations in order to keep abreast of the need
for any possible remedial and/or disciplinary action targeted at repeat
offenders. This requirement should be a component of any new building
licensing scheme adopted by DCA pursuant to Recommendation No. 1,
Government Oversight and Regulation of the Construction Process, at p. 27.
Additional Staffing
The DCA Office of Regulatory Affairs should be augmented – on an emergent
basis, if necessary – with the necessary funding and resources to deal with
workload changes brought on by activity in the construction industry.
Disciplinary Action Against Inspectors
DCA should not delay or suspend administrative action against local code
officials or inspectors, or fail to take action against builders, in instances
in
which a homeowner chooses to litigate or when a criminal referral has resulted
from an inspector’s activities. Current circumstances enable problem
code inspectors or construction officials to continue performing their duties,
possibly subjecting future homeowners to poor or deficient inspections and/or
construction. The potential for consumer harm is too great to delay
administrative action and provision of necessary training.
Duties of Construction Officials
The position of the local construction official should be more than a mere
administrative position. The individual who fills this position should have
direct expertise and authority (i.e. hold all or most sub-code licenses) over
all sub-code inspectors to oversee and be in a position to evaluate work
performed by staff. This official also should randomly check inspections done by
his/her staff to ensure that they were performed according to acceptable
and required standards. Having the licenses to do so is of critical importance.
Inspectors Working in Multiple Municipalities
Inspectors working in more than one municipality should be subject to greater
oversight and standardization. This process should include analysis by DCA
of data on the number of inspections being performed, time required, etc.
Promulgation of Code of Ethics
DCA should establish and promulgate a strict code of ethics for all state,
county and municipal building inspectors and construction code officials. On
an annual basis, ideally each year at the winter holiday season, DCA should
remind responsible officials of policies prohibiting acceptance of gifts and
gratuities by public employees.
2. Consumer Protection and Remediation
The Commission recommends the following legislation and regulatory reforms to
enhance the government’s ability to fulfill its administrative duty to protect
the safety and welfare of the citizens:
Proposed Legislation
Expand Consumer Fraud Act
New Jersey’s premier consumer protection law, the Consumer Fraud Act, as
promulgated by the Administrative Code, covers a multitude of activities
related to “home improvement.” As currently written, however, the Code
explicitly excludes the most extensive and fundamental type of improvement
in this regard – the actual construction of a new home. This statute, as
well as the relevant language in the Administrative Code, should be amended and
expanded to cover the activities of new-home builders and developers. It should
also be extended to cover circumstances involving faulty
workmanship, in addition to its current focus on the conveyance of false,
misleading and deceptive information. In the event a homeowner chooses to
4 NJ ADC 13:45A-16.1 defines “home improvement” as “the remodeling, altering,
painting, repairing, renovating, restoring, moving, demolishing, or modernizing
of residential or noncommercial property or the remaking of additions thereto,
and includes, but is not limited to, the construction, installation,
replacement, improvement, or repair of driveways, sidewalks, swimming pools,
terraces, patios, landscaping, fences, porches, windows, doors, cabinets,
kitchens, bathrooms, garages, basements and basement waterproofing, fire
protection devices, security protection devices, central heating and air
conditioning equipment, water softeners, heaters, and purifiers, solar heating
or water systems, insulation installation, siding, wall-to-wall carpeting or
attached or inlaid floor coverings, and other changes, repairs, or improvements
made in or on, attached to or forming part of the residential or noncommercial
property,
but does not include the construction of a new residence.” [Emphasis added]
pursue litigation as an election of remedy, these fundamental changes in the
Consumer Fraud Act would expand that homeowner’s options beyond those currently
available in an action under common-law fraud.
Establish New-Home “Lemon Law”
The Legislature should enact a new-home “Lemon Law” requiring that, in
instances where a reasonable number of repair attempts fails to cure a defect
that poses a serious safety hazard or substantially impairs the use or market
value of a new home, the builder/developer – at the homeowner’s option –
must purchase the structure and provide reimbursement to the homeowner for all
relevant expenses, including costs related to purchase, resolution of the
issue, legal representation, inspections, expert analysis, etc. Reimbursement
should include the cost of any upgrades, and be adjusted for increased or
diminished market value.
Public Disclosure
Legislation should be enacted to permit the collection, and disclosure to the
public, of information electronically maintained on warranty-claim activity,
violations of the Consumer Fraud Act and common-law fraud, judgments and
bankruptcies involving builders and developers, and criminal convictions of
officers, directors and stockholders.
Homeowners should be permitted to disclose code violations and substandard
building practices to federal, state and local government entities and
investigatory bodies. Legal judgments and/or out-of-court settlements requiring
sealing of such information (“gag orders”) should be deemed to be
in contravention of proper and appropriate public policy.
Legislation should be enacted to extend applicability of laws that govern
disclosure on resale of homes to the sale of new homes. Subsequent homebuyers,
especially those purchasing a home previously bought back by a builder, should
be advised of all code violations, structural problems and
remedial action taken on structural issues in that home as part of the purchase
process.
Contract Documents
Legislation should be enacted to require that detailed plans and
specifications be a part of the contract documents for the purchase of a home
and shall not
be subject to change without approval of both parties.Escrow of Funds
Homebuyers, at the time of closing, should be authorized to place in escrow
proceeds to cover the cost of incomplete construction, without affecting their
right to file a request for warranty performance for defects in other areas.
All homebuyers’ deposit money should be required to be held in escrow to
protect such funds in the event of builder default.
Inspections by Home-buyers
Home-buyers should be authorized to personally undertake progress inspections
during construction and during the pre-closing period, or to have a
designated professional retained by them do so.37
Option to Cancel
Home-buyers should be authorized by law to cancel prospective home purchases
with full refund of deposits if closing of title is delayed more than
90 days from the date set forth in the contract due to builder fault. No
reciprocal right of builder cancellation should be authorized for the same
delay.
Posting of Bonds
Builders should be required to post bonds to secure the satisfactory
completion of common elements not covered by warranty law or municipal
land-use bonds.
Procedures for Planned Real Estate Developments
In order to protect the interests of home-buyers in planned real estate
developments (so-called “gated communities”), a formal transition procedure
should be established to provide homeowners with: engineering reports for common
elements, at the expense of builder-controlled homeowners’
associations; evidence that all required municipal approvals have been obtained;
and a full accounting of all association activities during the period of
builder control.
Procedures should be established for homeowners associations, through
designated committees, to file warranty claims during the period when
builders still control such associations.
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Prohibit Mandatory Binding Arbitration
Arbitration mediation clauses in homeowner purchase contracts and/or
warranties should be optional. Homeowners should have the right to decide if
they prefer a form of mediation outside of the courts, but should not have to
give up their rights to pursue litigation regarding home-purchase contracts and
home defects of any type and/or home warranties based on “fine print” in their
agreement to purchase. It should only be done based upon informed consent.
Proposed Regulatory Reforms
Web Site for Consumers
Given the fact that the Commission, through its investigation, found that
prospective home-buyers are utterly in the dark with regard to the
performance record of builders/developers in New Jersey, a free,
consumerfriendly website and information system should be established and made
accessible to the public by links on Internet websites maintained by both DCA
and the Division of Consumer Affairs. At a minimum, this website should
provide information to prospective new-home buyers, including topics covered in
a new-home consumer education course and the following
materials and/or links:
− The Uniform Construction Code
− The New Home Warranty and Builder's Registration Act
− Industry standard guides
− Homebuyer’s Bill of Rights
− A home warranty process flowchart and guidelines
− An arbitration process flowchart and guidelines, including terms,
deadlines and conditions
39
− A list of registered builders and adjudicated complaints against them
− Complaints/questions/suggestions, e-mail hotline
− Explanation of the difference between code violations and warranty
violations
Complaint Processing
▪ All complaints from homeowners alleging consumer fraud violations with regard
to new-home construction should be investigated by the New Jersey
Division of Consumer Affairs and, if found to have merit, a written report of
the findings should be provided to the homeowners. In the event the complaint is
unfounded, homeowners should be advised of that as well. In cases where findings
against a builder are substantiated, the results should be posted on the
proposed consumer web site. The cost of these investigations should be defrayed
by fees and fines assessed against builders.
New-Home Warranty Reform
The Commission recommends the following legislative and regulatory reforms be
enacted to provide homeowners with a more responsive and meaningful system of
safeguards to protect their interests and ensure they have reasonable access to
fair and equitable recourse when confronted with defective construction:
Proposed Legislation
Expand Definition of Major Structural Defect
The definition of “major structural defect” should be changed to include
substantial failure to meet structural requirements, as opposed to its current
40 statutory definition requiring what amounts to a virtual collapse that
impairs the use of the building for dwelling purposes.
Extension of Warranty Coverage
The effective period for basic warranty coverage should be increased from the
current standard of one year to two years, and warranty coverage should be
extended to three years for water damage caused by construction and for lot
defects; to three years for deficiencies caused by defective materials, faulty
design or installation of plumbing, electrical, heating and cooling, mechanical,
fire protection, and well or septic systems; and to 10 years for major
construction and fire safety defects.
In instances where a determination has been made that a verified code
violation affecting life-safety or the habitability of a home exists after
issuance of a Certificate of Occupancy (CO), the homeowner shall be afforded
automatic protection of the new-home warranty program with respect to that
violation.
Upgrading of Penalties
DCA should be empowered to impose fines up to a maximum of $5,000 per
offense, for additional violations beyond merely the failure of a builder to
enroll a new home under the warranty law.
Proposed Regulatory Reforms
Homebuyer’s Bill of Rights
A Homebuyer’s Bill of Rights should be enacted to:
− Define builder responsibility
− Advise that the home-buyer has the right to attorney review of the contract
− Explain that contract documents include plans and specifications
− Describe homebuyer’s rights of access to local construction office files as
well as what a typically complete construction file should contain
− Explain what laws protect the homebuyer and what regulations builders,
inspectors, arbitrators, and warranty providers should be
following/enforcing
− Describe homebuyer’s rights and responsibilities in the warranty process,
including an explanation that selection of arbitration regarding a defect
precludes the option of civil litigation
− Outline the various periods of warranty coverage and what is covered in
each
− Describe explicit steps homebuyers should follow to protect their interests
− Alert prospective buyers to the importance of adhering to warranty
deadlines and advise on ways to recognize “lulling” and other delaying
tactics
− Define a homebuyer’s rights and responsibilities in arbitration and what to
do in the event of a biased or incompetent arbitration award
This Bill of Rights should be provided to prospective home-buyers no
later than the time of the signing of a contract for a new home.
Warranty Rights Booklet
A new information booklet should be prepared and mailed to owners of new
homes within four months after closing, with information on warranty and the
importance of filing timely claims. At closing, the new-home purchaser is
typically busy and unable to focus on this information.
Standardization of Escrow
The pre-closing walk-through inspection form should be standardized to make
clear the effect on warranty coverage of escrowing funds to correct any
deficiencies noted at that time.
Filing of Warranty Claims
All complaints/requests for service made by homeowners to builders and/or
their affiliated service providers should serve as notice to the New
Jerseyapproved
warranty provider. Such complaints should be copied by the builder and forwarded
to the warranty provider and to DCA.
Update Warranty Coverage
Warranty coverage should be revised on a regular or periodic basis to include
current issues, such as mold and brick veneer problems, and prevalent defects
that may arise due to changes in construction methodology and materials.
Extension of Coverage
Warranty coverage should be extended to include decks, porches and garages,
whether attached or detached, as long as they were built at the time of the
home construction.
Limit Opportunities for Repair
Instead of getting caught up in method-of-repair disputes, a builder should
have to undertake a repair satisfactory to code, industry standards and
warranty program requirements. If a fix is not effective, the builder would get
a second opportunity to repair within a reasonable period of time. However,
after two failed tries, the builder would be declared in default, DCA would be
notified, and the warranty plan would take over.
Monetary Settlement Standards
In cases where monetary settlement is the only option due to inability of the
builder or the warranty-provider delegate to effectively perform repairs, a fair
settlement process should be established and monitored by DCA. The
method-of-repair standard should be defined as the repair necessary to put the
home in “as new” condition and place the residence in compliance with applicable
codes and industry standards. Costs necessary to achieve these
standards should be the basis for settlement.
Augment Staffing
Given the thoroughly inadequate staffing of DCA’s Bureau of Homeowner
Protection – Private Plan Section, this unit should be equipped as soon as
practicable with sufficient resources and personnel to implement proper and
adequate oversight of private-plan warranty provider activity and to address
the needs of home-buyers in this regard. This office should have the authority
and capability to impose graduated fines on private-plan warranty providers to
address compliance failures in which DCA directives are ignored to the detriment
of New Jersey homeowners.
Audit Requirements
State and private warranty programs should be periodically audited
(functional and financial) to assess their adherence to state standards
governing adequacy of reserves, processing of claims and the handling of
builders who warrant a “poor risk” rating.
Arbitration Process
The current multi-step arbitration process should be eliminated in favor of
one arbitration, which should focus on correction (repair) of defects rather
than
monetary settlement. The method-of-repair standard should be the repair
necessary to restore the home to “as new” condition and place the residence in
compliance with applicable codes and industry standards.
The burden of proving a defect should be removed from the homeowner and
placed on the warranty arbitration process itself to alleviate the homeowner
from incurring the considerable costs associated with hiring professionals to
establish the existence of defects.
45
DCA oversight of the arbitration process in New Jersey should be
strengthened to include: reviewing of arbitrator qualifications; requiring that
all arbitrators who handle major structural or fire safety defect claims be
licensed as architects or professional engineers, specifically qualified in
residential construction technology; and ensuring that arbitrators and
arbitration services performing in New Jersey are in full compliance with
disclosure requirements of New Jersey’s arbitration law.
A clearly delineated right to arbitration dispute settlement should be
incorporated into the existing warranty law.
Private warranty plans should be required to actively eliminate conflicts of
interest of arbitrators through a rigorous plan-administered economic
disclosure and disqualification procedure, with copies of documents pertaining
to this process forwarded to DCA with a certification by the
warranty plan as to due diligence.
DCA should review any cases of homeowner dissatisfaction with the warranty
process.
Warranty plans should provide DCA with records of all complaints, beyond
mere numerical reporting.
The fee schedule for arbitrators should be examined and evaluated.
All arbitration hearings should be recorded and copies should be made
available to interested parties.
5 N.J.S.A. 2A:23B-1 et seq., entitled, “AN ACT concerning arbitration procedures
and supplementing 2A of the New Jersey Statutes”, effective January 1, 2003.
Arbitration deadlines should be evaluated as to reasonableness, and a method
of documenting notification (i.e. certified mail) should be established to
accurately record whether deadlines are met.
Arbitration services should be required to follow documented uniform
standards, available to the public through the DCA website. For example, the
American Arbitration Association provides a panel of arbitrators with resumes
from which one can choose, a standard which should be required in New
Jersey. A pamphlet should provide the homeowners with the needed guidance to
determine whether or not arbitrators are following their uniform
procedures.
In addition to delineating the warranty process in clear terms, warranty
booklets should discuss, in consumer-friendly detail, the UCC, the arbitration
process, the arbitration company and fees related to arbitration. Flow-charts
depicting the steps in the warranty process should be a mandatory part of all
private warranty provider booklets. A similar flow-chart should be included in
the New Jersey state-operated warranty plan booklet.
Oversight of the arbitration process should be undertaken by DCA to ensure
decisions are as objective as possible. Currently, there is nothing to ensure
that
arbitrators follow the American Bar Association code of judicial
conduct.Arbitrators should be required to make decisions based upon objective
data
and guidelines, such as industry standards, expert reports, and UCC
requirements. These standards, as well as all information and criteria
presented and/or used in arbitration, (i.e. arbitrator notations and comments)
should be contained in arbitrator files, which should be maintained by an
appropriate office within DCA for a specified period after completion of the
arbitration. These files would be accessed and reviewed only on the question
of bias or incompetence related to the arbitration.
Explanation of Coverage
Warranty booklets should explain to homeowners which code defects would
fall under UCC and other applicable construction codes and provide
information on obtaining the code(s) and industry standards.
The difference between a workmanship defect and a UCC violation should be
explained in the warranty booklet.
The role of the DCA as the watchdog agency or other consumer advocate in
warranty matters should be separately identified and explained on a dedicated
page in the front of the warranty booklet. Many homeowners confuse information
currently presented as just another bureaucratic level within the
approved warranty-provider institution. (Currently, it is not clear that one
should contact DCA to file a complaint about the builder, arbitration, or
warranty process.)
Warranty administrators should be required to issue homeowners reminders of
expiration of warranty coverage for select warranty periods at least thirty days
prior to the expiration of each warranty period, and to list those items covered
for that period.
4. Strengthening the Inspection and Enforcement Process
Given the critical importance of the inspection process in certifying that homes
are built in compliance with the applicable codes, the Commission recommends the
following legislative and regulatory reforms:
Proposed Legislation
Supplement Municipal Inspections
Additional inspection personnel, either through DCA or architects and
engineers working under the control of DCA, should be made available when
it is determined by the state that a municipality does not have adequate
staffing in relation to the amount of construction occurring therein. Further,
if
DCA makes such a determination, action by the DCA should not be subject to
appeal.
Increase Penalties
Penalties for violations of the UCC should be increased to a maximum of
$5,000 per violation to promote compliance with the code and to make
sanctions more than “the mere cost of doing business.”
Extension of Code Coverage
Statutory code coverage should be extended to lot improvements not currently
covered by the Municipal Land Use Law or the UCC. Standards should be
adopted for construction of driveways, porches, decks and site drainage.
Inspection coverage should be provided for these additional areas through the
promulgation of an additional licensed site engineering subcode under DCA’s
auspices.
Periodic Reviews of the UCC
Statutorily mandated reviews should be conducted periodically to assess and
update the UCC and other applicable codes to reflect industry changes in
building materials, construction practices and technology.
Proposed Regulatory Reforms
Builder Compliance with Framing Checklist
Given the critical importance of proper structural framing of new homes, DCA
should require all builders to utilize and certify compliance with its
framing checklist in order to provide builders with guidance as to what is
required, to increase accountability in this key area and to insure inspectors
are not being called out prematurely.
Coordination of Resources
Municipalities should be encouraged to consider entering into shared-service
agreements for code inspections. Thus, smaller towns could share resources
and increase efficiency throughout the State, in this critical area, without
incurring increased costs.
The use of regional or county construction inspection offices should be
studied to determine if such a system would provide greater efficiencies and
inspection resources while lowering or maintaining administrative costs.
Evaluation criteria should include whether such a system would serve to foster
independent, high-quality inspections by rotating inspectors, thus minimizing
familiarity among parties in fixed geographic areas or on large projects, and
by allowing inspectors to be deployed, as needed, throughout a given region.
Such an approach should also be examined to determine whether it would
advance a consistent approach to the interpretation and application of the
construction code.
OVERVIEW OF OUR CONSTRUCTION PRACTICE
Our office handles construction defects, townhouse and condominium construction problems, and consumer fraud construction claims. Specifically, we handle the following types of claims
This includes construction claims and litigation, and construction defects as cracked foundations, inadequate ventilation, heating or air conditioning, leaking roofs, defective windows.
BACKGROUND
Howard A. Gutman has successfully handled over 500 lemon law and breach of warranty cases and is the author of the the Year 2000 Legal Handbook, a book dealing with computer warranties, and is considered a leading authority on all types of warranties.
HOW DO I CONTACT YOU
Law Offices of Howard A. Gutman,
1259 Route 46, Parsippany, New Jersey 07054
(973) 257-9400, E-mail Howian@aol.com
Fax (973)257-9128
We offer a free initial telephone
consultation.
Keywords, construction law, lawyer, New Jersey
construction lawyer, construction claims, defect.