Too late for most anything.  It is attached to a funding bill that will be 
passed and although the Governor vetoed this NAHB/BAM (Builders Association of 
Minnesota) direct bill in 2012, he cannot line item veto it as far as I know.  
Ten legislators (almost all of whom have already voted for the ban) will vote 
on this in committee.



Here was my response to the former Speaker of the Minnesota House:



Below is an email that I just received a copy of that is being sent out to 
support the Builders.



I would guess that home builders make a great deal of money remodeling and 
repairing homes that have suffered fire damage.  Sprinklers would limit fire 
damage and repair costs.  Why do you think builders don't want sprinklers?



When I built my home on 9338 Minnesota Lane (just down from yours) Orrin 
Thompson would not let me put sprinklers in (1990). Today the same thing is 
happening across the state with a builder in Blaine not allowing a new home 
buyer to install sprinklers last year.



If they allowed sprinklers, and if they offered them, we wouldn't be fighting 
now.  Also, communities, as I stated the other day, can realize cost savings in 
fire department equipment and operations if residential sprinklers are 
installed.  How can those kinds of potential savings be ignored?  That's just 
one aspect, there is also the potential for narrower streets, more homes per 
street, fewer fire hydrants (spaced farther apart) and more, but you are not 
hearing any of that, are you?



Home builders aren't mentioning that granite counter tops cost more than 
residential sprinklers or that the furnishings in one room of a home cost more 
than residential sprinklers, are they?



Look at the link attached where the "NAHB is showing home buyers why they can 
afford a higher-priced home..."  That seems ironic doesn't it?



http://rismedia.com/2013-04-08/lower-operating-costs-mean-new-home-buyers-can-afford-more-house/



See my comments below.



Scott Futrell

(763) 425-1001 Office

(612) 759-5556 Cell





Take Action:  Contact the 10 Conference Committee members by calling or 
clicking on their linked email addresses above. You can use the example email 
below or compose your own message.



Example Email:



Subj: Vote No on Mandatory Indoor Sprinkler System for MN Homes



Dear ,



I'm a Minnesotan who works in the homebuilding industry. I strongly support the 
provision in the Omnibus Jobs and Economic Development Finance bill which 
prohibits a mandate for home sprinkler systems in our state's building code. 
Newly built homes in Minnesota are a national model for fire safety where fire 
deaths have virtually disappeared. There are other important factors I'd ask 
you to consider:



*             The housing industry plays a critical role in the state's ongoing 
economic recovery.

*             Coming out of the recession, consumers are very price-sensitive.

*             The cost of meeting the home sprinkler mandate is approximately 
$2.00 per square foot, and twice that for homes with well water. For a 4,500 
square foot (unfinished) home, this adds $9,000 -$18,000 to the cost of 
purchase.[saf]  This is a very subjective number and can only be determined on 
a home-by-home basis.  Remember this is new home construction only and is just 
as important to rural Minnesotan's as it is to city Minnesotan's because it can 
take a considerable amount of time for a volunteer fire department to get to a 
remote location.  The Builders cannot point to a CREDIBLE study that supports 
their costs. There are credible studies that give realistic costs.

*             Once installed, a sprinkler system requires more rigorous testing 
and maintenance than an equally-effective hard-wired smoke alarm system, 
further increasing costs for homeowners.[saf]  THIS IS FALSE! Virtually no 
maintenance or testing is required (I would be happy to provide you with the 
manual for the one- and two-family dwelling requirements NFPA 13D) and smoke 
alarms need their batteries replaced annually, to be tested monthly, and they 
need to be replaced every ten years.  None of that with sprinklers.

*             The potential impact of a false positive is also significant - 
while a false alarm for a smoke detector awakens the family, with a sprinkler 
system the house is flooded.[saf]  This is a very remote possibility and not 
something that a fire and life safety issue decision should hinge upon.  The 
fact is false alarms with smoke alarms make people disconnect their smoke 
alarms and then they aren't working when they are needed.

Scott



(763) 425-1001 Office

(612) 759-5556 Cell





-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of George 
Church
Sent: Tuesday, April 30, 2013 12:52 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Home sprinkler mandate in MN



Is there a truth on advertising law that could lead to cease and resist?



Sent from my iPhone
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