
The Real Estate Roundtable (RER) this week released a white paper authored by Paul Clement of Clement & Murphy, PLLC, adding significant constitutional concerns to the growing case against Section 901 of Title IX of the Senate-passed 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act (H.R. 6644). While the broader legislation contains several constructive provisions to help boost housing supply, the Senate bill’s restrictions on certain institutional investors would undermine new development, disrupt the build-to-rent (BTR) market, and raise serious legal questions. (White Paper, April 14)
Why It Matters
What the White Paper Says

Roundtable Advocacy

The constitutional concerns surrounding Section 901, and the broader policy debate over how best to expand housing supply, will be part of the discussion at RER’s Spring Roundtable Meeting (Roundtable-level members only) next week in Washington.

As focus on Capitol Hill shifted to appropriations talks this week, The Real Estate Roundtable (RER) and a broad coalition of organizations representing the real estate, consumer products, manufacturing, and retail sectors sent a letter urging congressional leaders to ensure that the ENERGY STAR program remains amply funded in the 2027 fiscal year (FY’27), starting Oct. 1.
Coalition Advocacy
DOE Budget Hearings

Roundtable View
Next week, Sec. Wright is scheduled to appear before Senate appropriators to discuss DOE’s budget request. RER will continue to track developments related to ENERGY STAR funding and support the continuation of the program and its smooth transition to DOE.

Congress returned to Washington this week after a two-week recess with little visible movement on the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, even as House Financial Services Committee staff continued work on a bipartisan response to the Senate-passed bill.
State of Play
Why It Matters

New Research

New Housing Legislation Introduced

Sen. Hagerty will also be a featured guest at RER’s upcoming Spring Roundtable Meeting next week (Roundtable-level members only), where housing supply, affordability, and related policy developments will be among the topics discussed.