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Take
a closer look at inspectors
New requirements create
flood of rookies .
by James
Hemsell
I’m sure you
know the Texas Real Estate Commission regulates
sales agents and brokers. They also regulate
home inspectors, and the commission made some
dramatic changes that may affect the quality of
home inspectors inspecting properties for your
buyers and sellers.
Prior to
January 1, home inspectors received their
licenses through one of two tracks. The original
licensing program followed the models of many
trades, such as plumbers and electricians. An
apprentice inspector worked under the direct
supervision of a professional inspector until he
had acquired 90 hours of classroom training,
performed 25 inspections under the direct
supervision of the professional inspector, and
passed the TREC licensing exam. The apprentice
inspector then became a real estate inspector
and had to acquire an additional 38 hours of
classroom education, 200 more inspections, and
pass another test to become a professional
inspector.
About eight
years ago, an alternate track was developed that
eliminated the sponsorship requirements and
substituted additional classroom education (60
hours) in lieu of the experience and supervision
requirements. Soon, most inspectors were
acquiring their professional licenses this way.
This eased entry into the profession but also
created problems with the quality of many home
inspections. Numerous professional inspectors
were now licensed who had never performed a
single inspection. These inspectors had not
developed the skills necessary to inspect the
property, communicate effectively with the
parties in the transaction, or fully understand
the role of the inspection in the transaction.
Effective January 1, TREC has modified the
educational requirements of the education-only
track to reflect the knowledge necessary to
perform the home inspection role. The commission
recognized that on-the-job experience increases
the effective amount of education that a home
inspector acquires in the sponsorship track. If
a home inspector performs 225 home inspections
during their 15-month training period under the
sponsorship track, the education-only track
should have the educational requirement
increased to approximate that amount of
on-the-job experience. Now, home inspectors on
the education-only track to acquire a
professional license must have 448 hours of
education before taking the test.
The closing door on the old regulations created
a flood of new home inspectors in Texas. As many
as 800 new inspectors may have obtained a
professional inspector’s license in the past
year or so.
This means the home inspector on your next
contract may not have sufficient experience—as
deemed necessary in the new requirements—to
perform his job at a level that could adequately
protect your client and the transaction.
Competition is a good thing; however, liability
lurks in every transaction. A newly licensed
home inspector may not have the best inspecting
and reporting procedures, proper equipment to
perform the inspection, or the experience to
adequately disclose the condition of the
property without placing the contract in
jeopardy.
The more experienced home inspectors in the
state belong to home inspector associations such
as the American Society of Home Inspectors
(ASHI) or the Texas Association of Real Estate
Inspectors (TAREI). Just like the Texas
Association of REALTORS®, these associations
concentrate on keeping their members up to speed
on the constantly changing real estate
profession. All TREC-licensed inspectors must
follow TREC regulations called the Standards of
Practice. TAREI and ASHI inspectors must not only follow
the TREC standards but also follow the higher
TAREI and ASHI standards, which results in a higher level
of inspection and reporting that will provide
your client with useful information about the
property.
James Hemsell
is a Denton-based Professional Inspector with 23
years experience. He is president of the Lone
Star chapter of the American Society of Home
Inspectors (ASHITexas.org).
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