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Colorado construction defect statutes and affordability

By Deborah Goonan, Independent American Communities

In Colorado, the battle over construction defects laws is heating up again, as explained by John Aguilar in the Denver Post:

Colorado’s condo problem: Local construction-defects laws complicate statewide reform effort

Builders, condo owners and local government collide over how to increase condo construction

http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_29372355/climate-construction-defects-reform-colorado-much-changed

 

Don’t you just love the political spin? Are we really supposed to believe that creating new laws that make it harder for condo owners to file a lawsuit involving defective construction is somehow going to make housing more affordable?

Oh, perhaps if builders could cut corners on quality of construction, they could sell new condos at lower prices. But what good is a low purchase price if, a few years later, the condo association requires tens of thousands of dollars per unit owner to repair or replace shoddy construction?

It’s time for a little blunt truth.

If CO leaders were truly concerned about affordable homeownership they would not be pushing condos. Collective ownership creates unpredictable financial risks and uncontrollable future maintenance expenses. This is, of course, in addition to regular property taxes and interior maintenance. Affordable homeownership? Far from it!

 

Our local government leaders must begin to entertain new ideas to increase affordability, such as the following:

Readers: do you have any other ideas about how we can prevent shoddy construction, without compromising individual property rights?

 

 

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