Assembly
Bill 300, introduced by Assemblyman Jason Frierson, D-Las Vegas, was
introduced in March and seeks to change a pivotal definition that is
part of Nevada Assembly Bill 284. AB284, which passed the legislature
last year, was supposed to help protect homeowners from illegal
foreclosures. What it has done, however, is to slow foreclosures to a
trickle, artificially raise prices throughout Las Vegas, and allow some
homeowners to remain in their home for years without paying on their
mortgages.
The
new bill seeks to replace the language of AB284, which requires anyone
signing documents on behalf of a lender to have “personal knowledge” of
who owns the promissory note on the loan with a phrase requiring those
signing foreclosure documents to have knowledge that could be “obtained
from reviewing business records of the beneficiary of the deed of trust
and information from the county recorder or title insurance issued by an
agent authorized to do business in the state,” according to the Las
Vegas Review Journal’s coverage of the issue. Assemblyman Frierson
describes the proposed revisions to AB284 as a compromise that
“realtors, title companies, bankers and legal aid all came together and
said this would satisfy their concerns about personal knowledge.”
It will be interesting to see what the effects of the passage of AB300 could be for the housing market in Las Vegas. It is possible that a loosening of the restrictions imposed on banks by AB284 could result in a new wave of foreclosures that drive prices back down in the valley. Many people, including myself, have cautioned that the rapid rise in home prices we’ve seen in Las Vegas in the last year and a half could be the beginning of another real estate bubble. Only time will tell, but if I had a house to sell in Las Vegas, I would definitely be selling it now.
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