Take Action Now to Ensure Choices in Building Code Adoption

Advocacy
Published
Contact: Karl Eckhart
[email protected]
VP, State & Local Government Affairs
(202) 266-8319

The U.S. House of Representatives will soon vote on H.R. 5473, the Promoting Resilient Buildings Act. This bipartisan legislation extends a sunsetting provision in the 2018 Disaster Recovery Reform Act that gives local governments, home builders and home owners flexibility in their natural disaster mitigation plans.

NAHB is encouraging all members to contact their representatives and ask them to vote for the bill.

The Disaster Recovery Reform Act established the definition of “building codes” to include the latest two published editions of relevant codes when reviewing for natural disaster mitigation. But that definition sunset in October.

If the building code definition is left to expire, FEMA will revert the definition to the single latest edition of codes when reviewing state, local and tribal Hazard Mitigation Plans.

The bill would require FEMA to allow home builders and municipalities to abide by rules published in the two latest editions of building codes, rather than just the single latest edition, when developing their Hazard Mitigation Plans, inspecting homes or building a house.

The original text of the Disaster Recovery Reform Act was meant to provide flexibility to governments, developers, builders and home owners, and H.R. 5473 would re-establish that flexibility. Building codes can change dramatically from cycle-to-cycle, so having the option to use more than one can save time and money.

A vote on H.R. 5473 is scheduled for Dec. 11. Contact Congress now and tell them to pass this important update.

Subscribe to NAHBNow

Log in or create account to subscribe to notifications of new posts.

Log in to subscribe

Latest from NAHBNow

Advocacy

Aug 01, 2025

Meet at Home with Your Members of Congress

NAHB members across the nation can build on the success of the June Legislative Conference by meeting with their lawmakers in their home districts in August to discuss key issues that affect the home building industry.

Sponsored Content

Jul 31, 2025

How Home Builders Beat the Labor Crunch with This Fast Financing Plan

Struggling to secure labor can force builders to make tough decisions: Do you delay a project? Sacrifice profits? Or turn down new opportunities? But smart builders don’t just react — they adapt their financing strategy to meet labor challenges head-on.

View all

Latest Economic News

Economics

Jul 31, 2025

Personal Income Rises 0.3% in June

Personal income increased by 0.3% in June, following a 0.4% dip in May, according to the latest data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis. The gains in personal income were largely driven by higher wages and social benefits.

Economics

Jul 31, 2025

Housing Share of GDP: Second Quarter 2025

Housing’s share of the economy registered 16.3% in the second quarter of 2025, according to the advance estimate of GDP produced by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. This reading is unchanged from a revised level of 16.3% in the first quarter and is the same as the share one year ago.

Economics

Jul 30, 2025

Fed Remains on Pause Again

At the conclusion of its July meeting, the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy committee once again held the federal funds rate constant at a top rate of 4.5%. However, two members of the committee dissented from the decision (Fed Board Governors Waller and Bowman), the largest number of dissenting votes since 1993.