Members of the New York State Assembly are considering ways to regulate the title industry — but without the kind of strict rules imposed on insurers this month by the state.
Assemblyman Kevin Cahill, chair of the Assembly’s standing committee on insurance, said the committee is weighing options for restricting title companies’ marketing expenses. But the approach would be more like “putting up guardrails,” rather than the blanket action taken by the Department of Financial Services. New regulations from DFS, which went into effect Feb. 1, ban marketing expenses like buying clients a cup of coffee, paying for meals and entertainment, or sponsoring continuing legal education classes.
Cahill said the Assembly is weighing legislation that “would specify those areas of compensation that could or could not be made.”
After the state Senate voted on legislation to unwind the DFS regulations, the bill was sent to the Assembly’s insurance committee.
“We want to repair the damage that’s been done by a regulation that overreaches the statutory authority granted to the agency,” Cahill said. “My goal would be to put in some reforms that would authorize the superintendent to place some restrictions on that which could be charged back to the buyer as part of a fee.” That would include marketing expenses like going to a gentlemen’s club, for example.
Cahill said the bill’s amendment would also deal with gratuities paid to closers, the independent contractors whose compensation relied on tips they received for attending closings, transferring bank checks, transporting documents and handling a myriad of other tasks. (DFS’ new regulations ban such tips.)
Cahill said his office has received a number of letters and calls from small businesses and title closers who are having trouble staying in business. “Real estate is the single greatest economic engine in New York state, and real estate comes to a standstill if people cannot be assured their titles are secure,” he said. “So it’s not something anyone should take lightly.”
DFS Superintendent Maria Vullo — who has aggressively fought to curb title companies’ marketing expenses — has said the Senate bill, if enacted into law, “would give a license to bribery.”
In a survey of its members by the New York State Land Title Association, members said they expect revenue to drop between 10 and 30 percent as a result of the DFS regulations. Ten to 15 percent predicted they will be force to make layoffs.