Pennsylvania - stronger protection from home improvement fraud is on the way
Pennsylvania has new legislation in process to establish better consumer protection for homeowners.
Bill highlights:
- a state-wide home improvement contractor database
- written contracts required for all jobs over $500
- the scope and cost of work be set out in the contract and clearly understood by the customer
- makes home-improvement fraud a criminal offense
- with stiffer penalties for scammers who target seniors
Although receiving senate passage is promising, the bill won’t become law until approved by the House of Representatives and Governor Ed Rendell.
Pennsylvanians should also note the gotchas:
For a contract to be enforceable against a customer, it would have to be signed by the customer and dated, and disclose the approximate time frame of the work and materials to be used, as well as the specifications and description of the work. It would also have to include the total sales price.
In addition, a contract would be voided if it has a clause that releases the contractor from building code requirements or liability, or that strips the customer of legal rights.
Source: phillyburbs.com.
This entry was posted on Thursday, June 14th, 2007 at 9:20 am and is filed under News & Analysis, Hiring a Contractor, Consumer Action, Consumer Beware, Legal, Contractor Complaints, Homeowner Contractor Relations, Pennsylvania. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.














Have your say
Fields in bold are required. Email addresses are never published or distributed.
Some HTML code is allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>URIs must be fully qualified (eg: http://www.domainname.com) and all tags must be properly closed.
Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted.
Please keep comments relevant. Off-topic, offensive or inappropriate comments may be edited or removed.