Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Guest Blogger Dianne Beaton on "Top 5 Reasons to Become Involved Within NAHB"

May 20, 2012

"Top 5 Reasons to Become Involved Within NAHB"

Today's guest blogger is Dianne Beaton, CGA, CAPS. Dianne is the 2012 NAHB Associate Members Committee Chairman and is an associate member from New Hampshire.

Dianne Beaton, CGA, CAPS
Quite a few years have past since I made the journey from Manchester, New Hampshire to Washington, D.C. and embraced my complete membership; local, state AND national. I have met so many fellow members from across the country and learned so much about other associations that it just naturally helped me become aware of all the possibilities of networking outside the borders of my state. I would like to share with you my thoughts and hope that I pique your interest and add NAHB to your "to do list." I hope you can join us for NAHB's Legislative Conference on June 6th and our NAHB Associate Members Committee on June 8th, both to be held in Washington D.C. At the end of my "Top 5" click on my name and contact me with any questions or input regarding Spring Board or becoming involved nationally.




  to Become Involved Within NAHB

1. Networking with your fellow members from other states - expanding who you know is very important in life and with social media sites like Facebook and LinkedIn our world is expanding like the original "Big Bang." You never know who you could help, and who could help you, by increasing your professional network. NAHB involvement is the positive steps to take in that direction.

2. Taking part on a national committee - members from different areas of the United States working towards like-minded goals. Not only can this help you with committee work back home at your local with similar committees, it also helps who become a better professional, working with such a diverse group of people. The mannerisms, the attitudes, the way others "look at life" are so varied but it helps you develop a unique set of people skills you wouldn't normally receive by being bound within your own state.

3. Learn about advocacy for our members at the federal level - now, more than ever, "The Hill" is where our industry will recover. Gaining insight to the advocacy process not only helps you understand what affects you, but helps you take action to protect yourself.

4. Gain a better understanding of housing issues in other areas of the country - when certain anti-home-building groups find a successful tactic in becomes only a matter of time before it spreads like weeds in your garden. What happens in New Jersey and California, our two most industry legislated and regulated states, has and will appear elsewhere. It's great to know, if there is a particular plan to stop housing in your state, that others have already "been there, done that" and could help you plan and prepare.

5. Engage in discussion about best business practices - NAHB builder members have a program designed to help them called "The Builder 20 Club" designed to help these members discuss their businesses with their peers, but peers that are of no competition because they are from different parts of the country. While associates don't have that particular program we do have our NAHB Associate Members Committee which can give you the same types of discussions. As an example, if you are a marketing professional in your state and you would like to discuss tactics on growing your business, someone who is your competitor is not likely to help. However, a fellow marketer from another state that you have successfully networked with and developed into a friendship would. 

Open your minds to the idea that not all things are confined within a state and let the world of our Federation flow towards you.
Regards,
Dianne
Dianne Beaton, CGA, CAPS
2012 NAHB Associate Members Committee Chairman

Thursday, May 17, 2012

New HBAK Registered Associates

Congratulations to Home Builder's Assoc of KY new Registered Associates


Dave French (2012 Chairman of the Associates Committee) (far left) with the three new members of HBAK's Registered Associates.  This honor was bestowed at the HBAK Spring Board meeting in Louisville on 5/17/2012 to (l-r):
  • Roberta Tanno of Essroc Cement Corp in Northern, KY
  • Carolyn Reynolds Bogie of Reynolds Insurance Agency, Richmond, KY
  • Butch Chidester of Atmos Energy in Bowling Green, KY
Congratulations to these three and mostly, our sincere "thank you" for all that you have done and all that you continue do to support our industry.


Monday, April 30, 2012

A Neat History Lesson

Thanks to Mike Kurpiel for this very interesting History Lesson.  We appreciate the information and the thoughts this blog contains.

April 22, 2012


"Old Photos and Tales of Past"

"The dimming of the light makes the picture clearer. It's just an old photograph, there's nothing to hide,  when the world was just beginning." - David Byrne & Brian Eno




The above picture is The Builders Association of Northern New Jersey's 1952 Installation Banquet, held at The Hotel Commodore in New York City. The local was chartered by NAHB in 1944 so this picture is really a great snap shot of a time when most local HBAs were forming, creating an identity for themselves. Leaders then were trail blazers, they had to be. This was all new to them. This local, in its heyday, was the most politically active in NJ and wielded influential power within the state. Today, due to the northeastern part of the state's old housing stock and scarcity of open land, the local is now known as The Builders and Remodelers Association of Northern New Jersey. Times change, members come and then leave, only to have new members begin the cycle. 

History is a wonderful tool. Understand it, but don't dwell within it. Remember it, but don't stop creating it yourself. One of the great tributes we have as an association is NAHB's Housing Center. The Center has The Past Presidents (now past chairmen) Wall with all their photographs proudly hanging, displayed for all to see when visiting. From the first president to the immediate past chairman. NAHB also has the Housing Hall of Fame, complete with plaques featuring the likeness of the builder Hall of Famer and the accomplishments of the recipient.  The associates have a Society of Honored Associates, designed to highlight those associates who have made an impact on our Federation. History. It should be respected and preserved so others can see, read, maybe even feel the past.

I believe it is important to understand the history of our association, and the key members that have built each and every local HBA. How the state HBAs formed was really a rallying mechanism to unite all the local chapters to focus on the core reason for an association; advocacy within the state's capitol. NAHB is built exactly like the state HBAs were built, but for a nationwide unification of advocacy within Washington, DC. These associations didn't build themselves and they certainly weren't created out of thin air. Passion was the key motivator, commitment was the engine that utilized the passion. Still is, but by an entirely different group of members. 


Take a good look at the above photograph again. You will be in one exactly like it in 60 years and the point is this; will anyone remember you? Think back 30 years. 20 years. 10, go back even 1 year. How many people have left us and we have nothing but an old picture to remember them by? If we remember them at all. Our association's history is rich and long. If it weren't for our past members, we probably wouldn't have an association, at least not like the one we have today.Take a look a what you are doing to keep your past ever present utilizing it to build a better tomorrow.


History must be written by and for the current members. While we still can all remember.


Submitted by:
Michael Kurpiel, CGA, CGP

Monday, April 2, 2012

Eliott Eisenberg, Ph.D. Senior Economist for National Assoc. of Home Builders

Dr. Eliott Eisenberg, Senior Economist for NAHB leads the HBAL General Membership Meeting attendees in first the UL then the UK Fight song.  Not really, but he did bring lots of laffs with his graffs in discussing the "Economy of Government Regulation".  Over 150 members attended and were all pleased that he said that he can assure us that we have reached the bottom of the depression.  He could not predict when we would or how far we would come out of the recession, but we definitely had hit bottom. 

Thanks to HBAL for giving us the opportunity to hear Dr. Eisenberg.

Friday, March 16, 2012

The Value of NAHB Membership

Our Thanks to Mike Kurpiel for passing this on to us.  I think it can only be helpful in your promotion of NAHB memberships.  Much of this I am sure you are familiar, but if you pick up one idea, then reading it is worthwhile. 

"The Value of NAHB Membership"

Association Maximization is honored to have as today's guest blogger NAHB's  Jerry Howard. During the recent NAHB board of directors meeting, held at the 2012 International Builders Show in Orlando, Jerry gave an overview of the monies saved by NAHB builder members. If builders can save money, it helps them become more profitable which in turn leads to more homes being built or renovated, giving associates more opportunities to gain business. We talk about the value of advocacy in helping our industry and now we look at the value of membership as it pertains to overall business.This is yet another example of the meaning of the statement "if it affects builders it will affect associates." 


"The Value of NAHB Membership"
by Jerry Howard,
Chief Executive Officer, National Association of Home Builders


As CEO of the National Association of Home Builders, I am often asked by NAHB members and non-members alike to explain the value of membership. I like to go right to the numbers on the bottom line of the ledger to explain how NAHB’s advocacy efforts save money for its builder members.

Of course, membership in NAHB is about a lot more than just dollars and cents. It’s about networking and industry-specific education programs that are not available anywhere else. It’s difficult to put a dollar value on benefits like that.

But we can put a dollar value on advocacy. And it’s a very big number: $5.7 billion. That’s billion, with a “B.”

NAHB’s advocacy efforts in 2011 on Capitol Hill and with regulatory agencies will provide members with $5.7 billion in either reduced costs or increased revenues this year. Those savings fall into eight broad categories:

·         FHA loan limits
·         Environmental Protection Agency actions
·         Building codes
·         OSHA
·         Building materials
·         The tax code
·         HUD multifamily programs
·         Fish and Wildlife Service

Below are a few examples of these savings.

Restoration of Higher FHA Loan Limits. The best example is the reinstatement of FHA loan limits. This represents the largest share of savings for builders – $1.9 billion. In late 2011, Congress allowed higher FHA loan limits that were in effect in 2010 and 2011 to expire. Later, after an intense campaign by NAHB, the higher FHA loan limits were reinstated. Home builders would have lost more than 6,000 new home sales this year if the higher loan limits had not been reinstated. From this and other aspects of the reinstated loan limits, NAHB’s efforts saved builders just over $1.9 billion.

Environmental Protection Agency. The next largest savings – $1.4 billion – are the result of NAHB’s actions related to regulations and requirements imposed by the Environmental Protection Agency. Following regulatory and legal challenges by NAHB, the Environmental Protection Agency admitted that the government did not have sufficient data to support a numeric limit for stormwater discharges. EPA then withdrew its proposed numeric limit, an action that will save builders $1.2 billion this year.

A different EPA action affecting remodeling will save $240 million this year. EPA proposed a requirement that a third-party test for lead be conducted following professional remodeling of homes built before 1978. NAHB argued that EPA had already imposed a regulation that all professional remodelers must be trained in lead abatement procedures, so the “swipe test” requirement was unnecessary. Moreover, the higher costs associated with the test would cause some people who would otherwise use the services of a professional trained in lead paint remediation to do the work themselves or hire an UNcertified contractor. In response to NAHB’s concerns, EPA later withdrew the proposal. At $260 per room, requiring the test would have cost professional remodelers $240 million this year.

Tax Code. The expanded 1099 reporting requirement in the tax code would have required companies to file a 1099 form for every corporate purchase over $600. NAHB strongly objected to the reporting requirement, and it was removed, saving members $140 million. 

Advocacy and Other Benefits

The examples above represent just three out of the many ways that NAHB’s advocacy efforts provided tangible savings for members.

There’s no question that $5.7 billion is a very impressive number. But that really is just a fraction of the value that NAHB provides. Members tell us time and again that the three things they value most from NAHB are advocacy, education and networking opportunities.

NAHB’s wide array of local, state and national events provide excellent networking opportunities for builder members and associate members. Likewise, our highly-regarded educational programs are offered by local associations, at events like the Green Building Conference, at the International Builders’ Show and – increasingly – on the Internet. And then there is the value of being able to call the EO at our local or state association – or talking to staff in Washington – to get answers to the questions that keep us awake at night.

The bottom line is that NAHB membership is an excellent value for builders and associates alike. At every level – from the local HBA to the state HBA to NAHB headquarters in Washington – helping members stay in business and thrive is our top priority.

We have 240 staff working on members’ behalf developing educational programs, creating networking opportunities and representing members’ interests in very challenging legislative and regulatory arenas.  NAHB’s 80-person advocacy staff includes lobbyists, lawyers, regulatory professionals, economists and public affairs specialists delivering value to members every day.

The $150 of membership dues that goes to NAHB purchases $5.7 billion for the housing industry.

That’s good for your bottom line, and a nice return on your investment.

Note: Jerry Howard has over 25 years of association experience and a lifetime in the housing industry.  Jerry began his association career at the National Association of Realtors, where he served as a Legislative Analyst for tax issues. Prior to joining NAHB, Jerry served as the Chief Lobbyist for the National Council of State Housing Agencies where he was instrumental in the development of the low-income housing tax credit as part of the Tax Reform Act of 1986. Jerry came to NAHB as tax counsel in 1988 and served in a variety of roles, including Chief Lobbyist. Jerry was promoted to Executive Vice President & Chief Executive Officer in February 2001. Before embarking on his association career, Jerry practiced real estate law in his home state of South Carolina. His exposure to the housing industry has literally encompassed a lifetime; Jerry grew up working in a variety of roles for his father, a developer.Jerry earned a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Vermont and received his Juris Doctorate from the University of South Carolina. He, his wife Christina and their children Eirann, Meaghan and Sean live in Virginia, just outside of Washington, D.C

Submitted by: Michael Kurpiel, CGA, CGP

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Chairman Barry Rutenberg's Letter to Associates


Here is a letter received by most Associates from NAHB Chairman of the Board Barry Rutenberg in response to the defeat of the by-law ammendment that would have placed an Associate of NAHB on the Senior Officer Leadership Team.

Monday, February 20, 2012

2012 Newly Elected NAHB Senior Officer Team

My thanks to Mike Kurpiel for this terrific and concise outline of the new leadership team at NAHB.  Judson, Kelly, and Woods all started in NAHB as Associates.

Association Maximization Welcome to "Association Maximization" a blog designed to help members of our Federation understand their HBA investment and maximize the return. This blog is for established members who are not engaged, new members who may need help navigating the HBA and for non-members to demonstrate the reasons why investment in membership will help your professional growth.


February 19, 2012"Meet the Newly Elected NAHB Senior Officer Team"

Placing titles to names, then names with faces, is a way of having our Federation members at home see the actual volunteer leaders who have made a decision to give back to their industry what their/our industry has provided them; a career in the most noble of professions, providing shelter. As you will see and read below, our senior officer team may remind you of leaders at home. In fact, they were, still are, leaders back home. Another way to demonstrate to our Federation members is to follow what our national volunteer leadership is working towards; our industry's recovery. Our NAHB senior officers, in particular,Chairman of the Board Barry Rutenberg, need our engaged passion to help them with initiatives designed to help the builder get back to work. If it affects a builder it will affect an associate so the overall goal is to help our entire membership get back to work. While the media keeps touting "job creation" our senior officers are delivering strategic road maps that will help with "job retention" and eventual "job restoration."

The board of directors in Orlando just experienced a very passionate debate regarding certain by-law amendments, with those in favor engaging the grassroots to support and those opposed equal to the task of messaging. NAHB now needs the membership, who fought hard on both sides of the by-law(s) issue to bring that same enthusiasm, that same passion and that same grassroots outreach, to deliver to our senior officers the membership mobilization needed to help them help all of us.
NAHB advocacy; political investing, calls to action and grassroots passion uniting builders AND associate members, along side HBA staff giving us all the power of one voice in Washington, DC. That one voice carries with it the echoes hundreds of thousands building industry professionals.

Our newly elected NAHB Senior Officer team, BRAVO!
(From NAHB.org)
NAHB Chairman of the Board
Barry Rutenberg, Gainesville, Fla. 
Taking the reins as 2012 IBS Chairman this month, Barry Rutenberg is president of Barry Rutenberg and Associates, Inc., and has more than 35 years of experience in the housing industry. He has developed more than a dozen communities and 1,000 homes in and around Gainesville. He has also been active in the NAHB leadership structure at the local, state and national levels throughout his career, having served on NAHB’s Board of Directors since 1980 and on more than 25 NAHB committees and councils. He has also served as an NAHB National Vice President representing Florida and Puerto Rico for three two-year terms. Read more here.

NAHB First Vice Chairman
Rick Judson, Charlotte, N.C.

Rick is a builder and developer who owns the Evergreen Development Group. He has several decades of experience in land development and construction of single-family, multifamily and commercial projects. Read more here.

NAHB Second Vice ChairmanKevin Kelly, Wilmington, Del. Kevin has been a builder and developer since he joined Leon N. Weiner & Associates in 1979 and became actively involved in the Home Builders Association of Delaware. His building experience includes land development, multifamily and single-family home building, with an emphasis on affordable housing. Read more here. 

NAHB Third Vice Chairman
Tom Woods, Blue Springs, Mo.
The newest member of the NAHB Senior Officer team, Tom joined the NAHB leadership ladder with his election to the post of Third Vice Chairman during the 2012 International Builders' Show. He is president of T.E. Woods Homes, a company he founded in 1974. His firm has developed scores of communities and more than 1,000 homes in the Greater Kansas City area. Read more here.

NAHB Immediate Past Chairman
Bob Nielsen, Reno, Nev.A leader in the Reno area home building and development industries for more than 25 years, Bob is president of Shelter Properties, a development and management company headquartered in northern Nevada. Read more here.

NAHB Chief Executive Officer
Jerry Howard, Washington, D.C. Jerry heads up NAHB's professional staff working out of the National Housing Center in Washington. He has served as the association's CEO/EVP since February of 2001. Read more here.
Let's also give special acknowledgement to all the past presidents, and now past chairmen, of our Federation, too many to name here on this blog but each extremely special in their leadership efforts and dedication in protecting our industry. Thank you, to all.


click here for the history of NAHB > http://www.nahb.org/NAHB_History/index.html

Submitted by:
Michael Kurpiel, CGA, CGPPosted by at 7:14 AM [Image] [Image] Email ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to Facebook