The House Small Business Committee is holding a hearing on Wednesday entitled, "The State of the Nation's Housing Sector: An Examination of the First Time Buyer's Credit and Future Policies to Sustain a Recovery."  The hearing will examine the current state of the nation's housing sector and the millions of small businesses who operate in it. The hearing aims to also assess the impact of the first-time home buyer tax credit on the real estate industry. Pamela Volm, President of Annapolis Contracting, will testify on behalf of the FixHousingFirst Coalition.

If your Member of Congress is on this Committee (you can check by clicking here to see the Committee roster), it is critical that today or tomorrow you send this note, letting them know that the tax credit is working and urging them to extend and expand the credit. We encourage you to personalize the message, and to talk about how it is impacting you, your business or your community. You can see from the success stories here on this site how the tax credit is benefiting everyone related to the industry - buyers, builders, Realtors, designers, landscapers, manufacturers - and even state and local governments. Make sure they hear from you.

 

 

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It Works!

"I am in Sales and this $8,000 tax credit has definitely been a catalyst to new home sales and would continue to be in all of our neighborhoods. We certainly hope this can be extended to continue to rebuild our economy. "

Sue
Maryland

Notable Voices

"Housing historically has been a key factor in helping the economy pull out of a recession. Extending the credit will help reduce the supply of houses for sale, stabilize prices and return housing to its rightful place in the economy."

Bernard Markstein
Senior Economist for the NAHB.

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In The News

Congress should expand $8,000 home-buyer tax credit

The federal stimulus package passed in February has many detractors, but nearly everyone agrees that one provision - the $8,000 first-time homebuyer tax credit - is working precisely as planned, stimulating demand amid record-high unemployment and economic uncertainty. So it's crucial that when Congress returns from recess next week, lawmakers extend the soon-to-expire credit through 2010. And if they want to bolster the fledgling recovery, they'll expand eligibility.

Mercury-News, September 3, 2009
Read the full editorial here