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Bankruptcy Reform Housing Provisions Supported

NAHB supports two housing provisions in bankruptcy reform legislation — H.R. 975, the “Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2003” — introduced on Feb. 27 by House Judiciary Chairman James Sensenbrenner (R-WI).

Under the first provision, home owners would be able to protect no more than $125,000 of home equity from creditors if they purchased their home within 40 months of filing for bankruptcy. If they had owned their homes longer than that, state homestead laws would prevail. In Florida and Texas, for instance, an unlimited amount of home equity is protected.

Intended to prevent renters from manipulating the bankruptcy process to avoid paying rent, the second provision would enable landlords to expedite evictions of residents who, during the bankruptcy process, haven’t paid rent or have used drugs or damaged property.

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The legislation is virtually identical to a bill that languished last year because of controversial language preventing abortion protesters from using bankruptcy to avoid fines and civil judgments against them.

That language has been dropped, paving the way for passage in the House. But abortion language remains a potential stumbling block in the Senate.

For further information, call 800-368-5242 x8470.

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