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For Immediate
Release
3/20/07
CONTACT:
Nate Silcox
(717) 787-6063
PA
Senate Republican Communications
(717) 787-6725
Senate Approves Bill to Cut Building Code Mandate
Requirement could increase housing costs by $3,000
HARRISBURG --
The Senate today unanimously approved legislation to exempt
Pennsylvania from a new building code requirement that was designed primarily
for coastal areas and earthquake-prone regions, according to Senator Bob Regola,
prime sponsor of the legislation.
Senate Bill 437 would amend the Pennsylvania
Construction Code (Act 45 of 1999) by addressing a new mandate contained
in the 2006 International Residential Code, which took affect on January
1, 2007. Under the mandate, all new residential construction is now
required to have "anchor bolts" when the foundation and retaining walls
are built, which could increase home building costs by as much as
$3,000, according to Senator Regola.
The measure now goes to the House of
Representatives for consideration.
"I am pleased that the Senate expeditiously moved
this bill. I hope it will move just as quickly through the House. This
is an excessive national standard that should have been instituted for
certain geographic regions of the country only, not Pennsylvania" Sen.
Regola said. "My legislation simply repeals the new mandate and
reinstates the previous standard on foundation wall bracing."
Steve Black, President of the Pennsylvania Builders
Association, stated "On behalf of our 12,000 members, I would like to
thank Senator Regola for taking the lead on this legislation which will
ensure that homes are structurally sound yet without adding unnecessary
costs."
According to the Pennsylvania Builders Association,
the states of Georgia and Indiana have removed the anchor bolt mandate
and North and South Carolina are currently going thru the process of
removing it as well.
Engineers from the Concrete Foundation Association,
the National Association of Home Builders, the Portland Cement
Association, the National Concrete Masonry Association and the National
Ready Mix Concrete Association are in agreement that these provisions
are unnecessary and have jointly submitted a code change to remove these
provisions from the next published edition of the IRC which will not be
until 2009.
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