Manufactured Housing Consensus Committee-Rejection of Subpart I Proposal, 34464-34473 [06-5390]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 114 / Wednesday, June 14, 2006 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Part 3282
[Docket No. FR–5072–N–01]
Manufactured Housing Consensus
Committee—Rejection of Subpart I
Proposal
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Housing—Federal Housing
Commissioner, HUD.
ACTION: Notice of rejection of
Manufactured Housing Consensus
Committee recommendation of
proposed regulation.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Manufactured Housing
Consensus Committee (MHCC) has
submitted to HUD recommended
regulatory text that would revise HUD’s
current Subpart I regulations that
implement statutory requirements
concerning how manufacturers and
others address reports of problems with
manufactured homes, including
notifications to consumers and
correction of safety defects and of
homes that fail to meet the Federal
construction and safety standards. The
National Manufactured Housing
Construction and Safety Standards Act
of 1974 expressly limits HUD to either
accepting such an MHCC
recommendation in its entirety for
publication as a proposed rule, or
rejecting the recommendation,
providing the MHCC a written
explanation of the reasons for rejection,
and publishing in the Federal Register
the rejected proposal, the reasons for
rejection, and any recommended
modifications. The Secretary commends
the careful work of the MHCC on this
initiative and would accept almost all of
the MHCC’s recommendation. HUD has
met with the MHCC numerous times on
these regulations, and the Department
and the MHCC have worked together to
draft a clear and comprehensive
revision of these regulations. However,
because HUD believes that certain
language included in the MHCC
recommendation is contrary to the
statute, HUD cannot accept the
proposal. Nevertheless, in accordance
with a different statutory procedure that
is available, and in an effort to resolve
the remaining differences between what
HUD could accept and what was
included in the MHCC
recommendation, HUD has also
submitted to the MHCC for its review a
HUD proposal for revision of subpart I
that is based on the MHCC
recommendation, with a few
modifications as discussed in this
notice.
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As required by the statute, the full
text of the MHCC’s recommendation is
set forth in this notice for informational
purposes, along with HUD’s reasons for
not accepting all of the
recommendations and an explanation of
the modifications HUD has suggested to
the MHCC. A set of principles that the
MHCC drafted to guide its development
of its recommendation is also set out in
this notice. In accordance with statutory
procedure, after HUD has received the
MHCC’s comments on HUD’s proposal
to revise Subpart I and HUD has
considered those comments, HUD
expects to publish separately a proposed
rule revising Subpart I for public
comment.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
William W. Matchneer III, Associate
Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Regulatory Affairs, Office of Regulatory
Affairs and Manufactured Housing,
Room 9164, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street,
SW., Washington, DC 20410; telephone
(202) 708–6401 (this is not a toll free
number). Persons with hearing or
speech impairments may access this
number via TTY by calling the toll-free
Federal Information Relay Service at
800–877–8389.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Manufactured Housing Consensus
Committee (MHCC) was established by
the National Manufactured Housing
Construction and Safety Standards Act
of 1974, 42 U.S.C. 5401–5426 (the Act),
for the purpose of providing periodic
recommendations to the Secretary to
adopt, revise, and interpret the Federal
manufactured housing construction and
safety standards and the procedural and
enforcement regulations. 42 U.S.C.
5403(a)(3)(A). The MHCC may submit to
the Secretary proposed procedural and
enforcement regulations and
recommendations for the revision of the
regulations. 42 U.S.C. 5403(b)(1). To be
promulgated by the Department, the
regulations and revisions recommended
by the MHCC must be consistent with
the Act.
When the Secretary receives a
proposed procedural or enforcement
regulation from the MHCC, the
Secretary must either approve the
proposal with no modification or reject
the proposal. If the Secretary rejects the
proposal, HUD must provide to the
MHCC a written explanation of the
reasons for rejection and publish the
proposal, the reasons for rejection, and
recommended modifications in the
Federal Register. 42 U.S.C. 5403(b)(4).
The MHCC has transmitted to the
Secretary a recommendation dated June
3, 2005 (Recommendation), that the
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Manufactured Housing Home
Procedural and Enforcement
Regulations, 24 CFR part 3282, be
amended by revising Subpart I,
Consumer Complaint Handling and
Remedial Actions (24 CFR 3282.401–
3282.416) (Subpart I). The
Recommendation is the product of
extensive work of the MHCC over a
period of several months, through 20
lengthy meetings that have involved
producers and a retailer of
manufactured housing, consumers,
administrators of State manufactured
housing programs, other interested
parties, and HUD. During those
discussions, HUD advised the MHCC
members, orally and in writing, of
concerns that HUD would have with
certain language under consideration by
the MHCC and the reasons for those
concerns. The MHCC addressed some,
but not all, of those concerns in its final
Recommendation.
Subsequent to the submission of the
Recommendation, there have been 7
additional meetings of the MHCC and
HUD to discuss the MHCC
Recommendation and revisions that
HUD had suggested. Agreement was
reached on some further changes
suggested by HUD or members of the
MHCC during those meetings, and those
changes will be included in the
proposed rule that HUD expects to
publish later. In the end the MHCC
declined, however, to revise its
Recommendation in a manner that
would allow HUD to accept it,
unchanged, for publication as a
proposed rule.
While HUD agrees with a great
majority of the MHCC Recommendation,
HUD continues to believe that some of
the language in the Recommendation is
not consistent with the Act and that a
few modifications of the language are
needed. Therefore, because HUD cannot
accept the entire Recommendation,
HUD must reject the entire
Recommendation. HUD is following the
procedure established in section
604(b)(4) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
5403(b)(4)), under which, upon
rejection, the Secretary must publish
notice of the Recommendation in the
Federal Register, along with
modifications that HUD would suggest.
The Secretary appreciates the
dedication and care that the MHCC
members have shown in their
consideration of the changes suggested
for subpart I, and expects to move
forward under the separate procedure to
publish a proposed rule for public
comment that embraces a great majority
of the revised subpart I language
included in the Recommendation. The
proposed rule that HUD has presented
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to purchasers, and about language
establishing new responsibilities for
retailers and distributors that are not
found in the Act. HUD would modify
§ 3282.415(c) of the MHCC
Recommendation by eliminating
phrases that would limit the
Areas To Be Modified
manufacturers’ pre-sale correction
HUD is setting out in this section of
responsibilities and could require HUD
the notice its reasons for the rejection of and State regulators to meet new
the Recommendation and the
burdens of proof in assuring production
modifications that HUD has suggested to of manufactured homes that comply
the MHCC.
with the Federal construction and safety
Reasons for Rejection: Requirements Not standards. HUD also would delete
§ 3282.415(d) as being inconsistent with
Consistent With Statutory Authority
sections 613 and 623(c)(12) of the Act
(§§ 3282.404(b)(3), 3282.405(a)(2),
(42 U.S.C. 5412 and 5422 (c)(12)).
3282.415(c), and 3282.415(d) in
Other suggested modifications:
Recommendation). In section 615 of the determination factors
Act (42 U.S.C. 5414), Congress placed
(§ 3282.404(c)(2)(iii)). In the proposed
responsibility for the notification and
rule that HUD has submitted to the
correction of defects in manufactured
MHCC for prepublication review, HUD
homes on manufacturers, and set
also included a few other modifications
guidelines for manufacturers to meet
to the Recommendation, even though
these responsibilities. Section 613 of the HUD does not base its rejection of the
Act (42 U.S.C. 5412) imposes additional MHCC Recommendation on these
repair and repurchase requirements on
modifications.
manufacturers. The MHCC has
HUD believes that it is important for
recommended some revisions of the
manufacturers to use appropriate
Subpart I requirements that are not
methods for determining which
consistent with the responsibilities
manufactured homes should be
established by Congress when it granted included in a class of homes for which
preemption for the Federal standards
notification or correction of defects or
that apply to the construction of
safety hazards is required. Currently,
manufactured homes.
§ 3282.409(c) of HUD’s regulations
The MHCC has recommended
recognizes a methodology that includes
limiting the responsibility for furnishing inspection of the actual homes, not the
notification to homeowners about safety records of those homes. The MHCC
hazards and failures to comply with the Recommendation would revise the
Federal standards, which Congress
current provision by permitting
expressly placed on manufacturers
inspection of the records, including
under section 615(a) of the Act (42
consumer and retailer complaints,
U.S.C. 5414(a)). Under the MHCC
rather than the homes. HUD would
Recommendation, in some of these
modify that permissive language to
instances consumers would not receive
make it clear that the methodology
notification of problems in their home.
would only be acceptable if the cause of
HUD would modify the language in
the problem is such that it would be
§§ 3282.404(b)(3) and 3282.405(a)(2) of
understood and reported by consumers
the Recommendation to eliminate
or retailers. For example, inadequate
phrases that limit a manufacturer’s
firestopping in a home is not a
notification responsibilities to only
condition that a homeowner, or even a
those problems that are caused by
retailer, can be expected to observe and
persons working on behalf of a
report. Therefore, a manufacturer who is
manufacturer. Consistent with the Act
determining the scope of a class of
HUD would continue, however, to limit homes with inadequate firestopping
the manufacturer’s correction
should not be permitted to rely on
responsibilities to only those defects
complaint records alone to identify the
that are related to errors in design or
homes to be included in the class.
Other suggested modifications:
assembly of the home by the
recordkeeping. HUD would also add
manufacturer, in accordance with
language in the recordkeeping
section 615(g) (42 U.S.C. 5414(g)).
requirements in § 3282.417 that would
HUD has a similar concern about
provide options for how to comply with
language limiting the manufacturer’s
the requirements and would avoid using
responsibility under section 613 of the
an undefined term. These modifications
Act (42 U.S.C. 5412) for correcting
would establish a brighter line for how
noncompliances, defects, serious
defects, and imminent safety hazards in manufacturer records are to be
maintained. The new provisions would
homes delivered to retailers and
distributors before those homes are sold also recognize a manufacturer’s right to
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to the MHCC for its consideration under
the procedures in section 604(b)(3) of
the Act (42 U.S.C. 4503(b)(3)) uses the
MHCC Recommendation as its base, but
also includes the modifications that are
discussed in this notice.
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keep some of these records in a central
class determination file that might be
preferred by some manufacturers and
would reduce the amount of paperwork
required. HUD would add such an
alternative because some manufacturers
are already keeping their records in this
alternative format, which is a format
that also could be more user-friendly for
HUD and State regulators in enforcing
the law.
Other suggested modifications:
generally. HUD would reorganize
§§ 3282.411 and 3282.412 of the MHCC
Recommendation, to assure these
provisions are internally consistent. The
general structure of the MHCC
Recommendation would be retained,
however. Section 3282.411 of the
Recommendation establishes the
prerequisites for any SAA to refer
information to the appropriate SAA or
HUD for possible investigation. Section
3282.412 sets forth requirements for
HUD or an appropriate SAA to initiate
a formal administrative investigation
process. The revisions HUD would
make in these sections of the
Recommendation would be technical
changes to simplify and clarify the
provisions and to avoid overlap within
the two sections.
HUD also would add a requirement in
§ 3282.404(a) that, when a manufacturer
makes an initial determination of a
serious defect or imminent safety
hazard, the manufacturer must notify
HUD, the appropriate SAA, and the
manufacturer’s IPIA of the
determination. The purpose of this
requirement would be to provide
advance notice of a potentially serious
problem during the time the
manufacturer is required to develop a
full plan of notification and correction
regarding the problem. HUD would
consider this modification to be
appropriate in light of the MHCC’s
Recommendation that would extend the
time a manufacturer has to complete its
plan beyond what is permitted under
the existing regulations.
Finally, HUD included clarifying and
nonsubstantive, editorial changes in the
modified version of the
Recommendation that HUD submitted
to the MHCC for its prepublication
review. These changes would be minor
and would be for the purpose of making
the intent of the applicable provision
more clear.
Principles Guiding MHCC
Subcommittee
The following principles were
adopted by the MHCC subcommittee
that was charged with developing a
draft revision of subpart I for full
committee consideration, and are
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included in this notice to provide
additional context for the MHCC’s
efforts on this difficult undertaking:
(1) Subpart I regulations should
clearly identify, especially to the
homeowner, what problems
manufacturers will correct. At a
minimum, problems currently being
corrected will continue to be corrected.
(2) Subpart I should hold the
manufacturer accountable for all
construction to comply with the Federal
manufactured home construction and
safety standards.
(3) If a person is contractually
obligated to provide a service or extend
a warranty for work that is the
manufacturer’s responsibility, subpart I
regulations would not preclude
fulfillment of that obligation or
warranty.
(4) Subpart I regulations should
clearly define when a manufacturer has
a duty to investigate and how the
investigation should be performed.
(5) Subpart I should describe methods
available to conduct an investigation
and indicate the investigation methods
may vary based on the circumstances
surrounding the problem.
(6) Subpart I regulations should hold
the manufacturer accountable for
choosing the most appropriate method
of investigation based on the known
facts concerning the problem.
(7) Subpart I regulations should
support the manufacturer’s findings and
subsequent course of action when a
manufacturer has conducted in good
faith an appropriate investigation based
on the facts available and taken
appropriate action. If additional
information is presented, then a new
investigation may be necessary. SAAs
and HUD oversight may be conducted as
necessary.
(8) Subpart I regulations should
require manufacturers to utilize service
records and approved designs as part of
the investigative process.
(9) Subpart I regulations should
clearly identify who is accountable for
problems occurring to sections of homes
that are in transit, in storage or at retail
sales centers.
(10) Subpart I regulations should not
hold the manufacturer responsible for
normal wear and aging, unforeseeable
consumer abuse or neglect of proper
maintenance. The regulations need to
indicate how old the manufactured
home needs to be before these factors
could be considered the primary cause
of the problem. The life of the product
warranty may be considered for time
limits.
(11) The manufacturer’s responsibility
for construction should be separate and
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distinct from any manufacturer
responsibility for installation.
(12) Subpart I regulations should
utilize consistent wording and be in
conformance with the Act as amended
by the MHIA 2000.
(13) Subpart I regulations should
place a priority on correcting the
problem while maintaining
requirements for sufficient
documentation to identify patterns in
construction problems.
(14) HUD cannot exceed its statutory
authority and must implement all of the
requirements of the Act.
(15) For each recommendation, the
MHCC will consider the factors in
section 604(e) of the Act and any other
statutory guidance.
(16) The recommendations for
notification and correction should be
consistent with the requirements of
sections 602 and 615 of the Act.
Text of MHCC Proposal
The text of the rejected proposal
submitted by the MHCC is published as
Appendix A.
Dated: May 23, 2006.
Brian D. Montgomery,
Assistant Secretary for Housing-Federal
Housing Commissioner.
Appendix A—Text of Rejected MHCC
Recommendation to Amend Subpart I
of 24 CFR Part 3282
Subpart A: Changes in Definitions:
§ 3282.7 (j): Text with proposed modification:
Defect means, for purposes of this part, a
failure to comply with an applicable Federal
manufactured home safety and construction
standard including any defect in the
performance, construction, components or
material that renders the manufactured home
or any part thereof not fit for the ordinary use
for which it was intended, but does not result
in an unreasonable risk of injury or death to
occupants of the affected manufactured
home.
§ 3282.7 (v): Text with proposed
modification:
Manufactured Home Construction means
all activities relating to the assembly and
manufacture of a manufactured home
including, but not limited to, those relating
to durability, quality, and safety, but does not
include those activities regulated under the
installation standards in this chapter.
§ 3282.7 (dd) (NEW): Proposed New Text:
Manufactured Home installation standards
means reasonable specifications for the
installation of a manufactured home, at the
place of occupancy, to ensure the proper
siting, the joining of all sections of the home,
and the installation of stabilization, support
or anchoring systems.
Subpart H, § 3282.362(c)(1):
Add the following new 11th sentence,
before the sentence ‘‘Failure to perform to the
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approved manual justifies withholding labels
until an adequate level of performance is
attained.’’
‘‘The IPIA must periodically review the
manufacturer’s service records for
determinations under § 3282.404 to see
whether evidence exists that the
manufacturer is ignoring or not performing
under its approved quality assurance manual,
and, if such evidence is found, must advise
the manufacturer so that appropriate action
may be taken under § 3282.404.’’
Subpart I
Table of Contents:
§ 3282.401 Purpose and scope
§ 3282.402 General provisions
§ 3282.403 Consumer complaint and
information referral
§ 3282.404 Determinations and
concurrences
§ 3282.405 Notification pursuant to
manufacturer’s determination
§ 3282.406 Required manufacturer
correction
§ 3282.407 Voluntary compliance with the
notification and correction requirements
under the Act
§ 3282.408 Plan of notification required
§ 3282.409 Contents of plan
§ 3282.410 Implementation of plan
§ 3282.411 Administrative initiation of
remedial action
§ 3282.412 Preliminary and final
administrative determinations
§ 3282.413 Implementation of Final
Determination
§ 3282.414 Replacement or repurchase after
sale to purchaser
§ 3282.415 Correction of homes before sale
to purchaser
§ 3282.416 Oversight of notification and
correction activities
§ 3282.417 Recordkeeping
§ 3282.418 Factors for appropriateness and
amount of civil penalties
§ 3282.401 Purpose and scope.
(a) Purpose. The purpose of this subpart is
to establish a system of protections provided
by the Act with respect to imminent safety
hazards and violations of the construction
and safety standards with a minimum of
formality and delay, while protecting the
rights of all parties.
(b) Scope. This subpart sets out the
procedures to be followed by manufacturers,
retailers, State Administrative Agencies,
primary inspection agencies, and the
Secretary to assure that notification and
correction are provided with respect to
manufactured homes when required under
this subpart. Notification and correction may
be required with respect to manufactured
homes that have been sold or otherwise
released by the manufacturer to another
party.
§ 3282.402 General provisions.
(a) Purchaser’s rights. Nothing in this
subpart shall limit the rights of the purchaser
under any contract or applicable law.
(b) Manufacturer’s liability limited. A
manufacturer is not responsible for failures
that occur in any manufactured home or
component as the result of normal wear and
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aging, unforeseeable consumer abuse, or
unreasonable neglect of maintenance. The
life of a component warranty may be one of
the indicators used to establish normal wear
and aging. A failure of any component may
not be attributed by the manufacturer to
normal wear and aging under this subpart
during the term of any applicable warranty
provided by the original manufacturer of the
affected component.
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§ 3282.403 Consumer complaint and
information referral.
(a) Retailer responsibilities. When a retailer
receives a consumer complaint or other
information about a home in its possession,
or that it has sold or leased, that likely
indicates a noncompliance, defect, serious
defect, or imminent safety hazard, the retailer
must forward the complaint or information to
the manufacturer of the manufactured home
in question as early as possible in accordance
with § 3282.256.
(b) SAA and HUD responsibilities. (1)
When an SAA or the Secretary receives a
consumer complaint or other information
that likely indicates a noncompliance, defect,
serious defect, or imminent safety hazard in
a manufactured home, the SAA or HUD
must:
(i) Forward the complaint or information to
the manufacturer of the home in question as
early as possible; and
(ii) Send a copy of the complaint or other
information to the SAA of the State where
the manufactured home was manufactured or
to the Secretary if there is no such SAA.
(2) When it appears from the complaint or
other information that an imminent safety
hazard or serious defect may be involved, the
SAA of the State where the home was
manufactured must also send a copy of the
complaint or other information to the
Secretary.
(c) Manufacturer responsibilities.
Whenever the manufacturer receives
information from any source that the
manufacturer believes in good faith relates to
a noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard in any of its
manufactured homes, the manufacturer must,
for each such occurrence, make the
determinations required by § 3282.404.
§ 3282.404 Manufacturers’ determinations
and related concurrences.
(a) Initial determination. (1) Not later than
30 days after a manufacturer receives
information that it believes in good faith
likely indicates a noncompliance, defect,
serious defect, or imminent safety hazard, the
manufacturer must make a specific initial
determination that there is a noncompliance,
a defect, a serious defect, an imminent safety
hazard, or that the information requires no
further action under subpart I. When no
further action under subpart I is required and
a problem still exists, the manufacturer must
forward the information in its possession to
the appropriate retailer and, if known, the
installer, for their consideration.
(2) In making the determination of
noncompliance, defect, serious defect,
imminent safety hazard, or that no further
action is required under subpart I, the
manufacturer must review the information it
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received and carry out reasonable
investigations, including, if appropriate,
inspections. The manufacturer must review
the information, the known facts, and the
circumstances relating to the complaint or
information, including service records,
approved designs, and audit findings, as
applicable, to decide what investigations are
reasonable.
(b) Class determination. (1) When the
manufacturer makes an initial determination
of defect, serious defect, or imminent safety
hazard, the manufacturer must also make a
good faith determination of the class that
includes each manufactured home in which
the same defect, serious defect, or imminent
safety hazard exists or likely exists. Multiple
occurrences of defects may be considered the
same defect if they have the same cause, are
related to a specific workstation description,
or are related to the same failure to follow the
manufacturer’s approved quality assurance
manual. Good faith may be used as a defense
to the imposition of a penalty, but does not
relieve the manufacturer of its
responsibilities for notification or correction
under this subpart I. The manufacturer must
make this class determination not later than
20 days after making a determination of
defect, serious defect, or imminent safety
hazard.
(2) Paragraph (c) of this section sets out
methods for a manufacturer to use in
determining the class of manufactured
homes. If the manufacturer can identify the
precise manufactured homes affected by the
defect, serious defect, or imminent safety
hazard, the class of manufactured homes may
include only those manufactured homes
actually affected by the same defect, serious
defect, or imminent safety hazard. The
manufacturer is also permitted to exclude
from the class those manufactured homes for
which the manufacturer has information that
indicates the homes were not affected by the
same cause. If it is not possible to identify
the precise manufactured homes affected, the
class must include every manufactured home
in the group of homes that is identifiable
because the same defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard exists or likely exists
in some homes in that group of manufactured
homes.
(3) For purposes related to this section, a
defect, a serious defect, or an imminent
safety hazard likely exists in a manufactured
home if the cause of the defect, serious
defect, or imminent safety hazard is such that
the same defect, serious defect, or imminent
safety hazard would likely have been
introduced systematically into more than one
manufactured home by the manufacturer,
including a person performing work or
providing a component on behalf of the
manufacturer. Indications that the defect,
serious defect, or imminent safety hazard
would likely have been introduced
systematically may include, but are not
limited to, complaints that can be traced to
the same faulty design, problems known to
exist in supplies of components or parts,
information related to the performance of a
particular employee or use of a particular
process, and information signaling a failure
to follow quality control procedures with
respect to a particular aspect of the
manufactured home.
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(4) If under this paragraph (b) the
manufacturer must determine the class of
homes, the manufacturer must obtain from
the IPIA, and the IPIA must provide, either:
(i) The IPIA’s written concurrence on the
methods used by the manufacturer to identify
the homes that should be included in the
class of homes; or
(ii) The IPIA’s written statement explaining
why it believes the manufacturer’s methods
for determining the class of homes were
inappropriate or inadequate.
(c) Methods for determining class. (1) In
making a class determination under
paragraph (b) of this section, a manufacturer
is responsible for carrying out reasonable
investigations. In carrying out reasonable
investigations, the manufacturer must review
the information, the known facts, and the
relevant circumstances, and generally must
establish the cause of the defect, serious
defect, or imminent safety hazard. Based on
the results of such investigations and all
information received, the manufacturer must
use an appropriate method or appropriate
methods to determine the class of
manufactured homes in which the same
defect, serious defect, or imminent safety
hazard exists or likely exists.
(2) Methods that may be used in
determining the class of manufactured homes
include, but are not limited to:
(i) Inspection of the manufactured home in
question, including its design, to determine
whether the defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard resulted from the
design itself;
(ii) Physical inspection of manufactured
homes of the same design or construction, as
appropriate, that were produced before and
after a home in question;
(iii) Inspection of the service records of a
home in question and of homes of the same
design or construction, as appropriate,
produced before and after that home;
(iv) Inspection of manufacturer quality
control records to determine whether quality
control procedures were followed and, if not,
the time period during which they were not;
(v) Inspection of IPIA records to determine
whether the defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard was either detected
or specifically found not to exist in some
manufactured homes;
(vi) Identification of the cause as relating
to a particular employee whose work, or to
a process whose use, would have been
common to the production of the
manufacturer’s homes for a period of time;
and
(vii) Inspection of records relating to
components supplied by other parties and
known to contain or suspected of containing
a defect, a serious defect, or an imminent
safety hazard.
(3) When the Secretary or an SAA decides
the method chosen by the manufacturer to
conduct an investigation in order to make a
class determination is not the most
appropriate method, the Secretary or SAA
must explain in writing to the manufacturer
why the chosen method is not the most
appropriate.
(d) Documentation required. The
manufacturer must comply with the
recordkeeping requirements in § 3282.417 as
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applicable to its determinations and any IPIA
concurrence or statement that it does not
concur.
§ 3282.405 Notification pursuant to
manufacturer’s determination.
(a) General requirement. Every
manufacturer of manufactured homes must
provide notification as set out in this section
with respect to any manufactured home
produced by the manufacturer in which the
manufacturer determines, in good faith, that
there exists or likely exists:
(1) A serious defect or an imminent safety
hazard; or
(2) The same defect caused by a
manufacturer, including a person performing
work or providing a component on behalf of
the manufacturer, that has been introduced
systematically into more than one home.
(b) Requirements by category. (1)
Noncompliance. A manufacturer must
provide notification of a noncompliance only
when ordered to do so by the Secretary or an
SAA pursuant to §§ 3282.412 and 3282.413.
(2) Defects. When a manufacturer has made
a determination in accordance with
§ 3282.404 that a defect exists or likely exists
in more than one home, the manufacturer
must prepare a plan for notification in
accordance with § 3282.408, and must
provide notification with respect to each
manufactured home in the class of
manufactured homes.
(3) Serious defects and imminent safety
hazards. When a manufacturer has made a
determination in accordance with § 3282.404
that a serious defect or imminent safety
hazard exists or likely exists, the
manufacturer must prepare a plan for
notification in accordance with § 3282.408,
must provide notification with respect to all
manufactured homes in which the serious
defect or imminent safety hazard exists or
likely exists, and must correct the home or
homes in accordance with § 3282.406.
(c) Plan for notification required. (1) If a
manufacturer determines that it is
responsible for providing notification under
this section, the manufacturer must prepare
and receive approval on a plan for
notification as set out in § 3282.408, unless
the manufacturer meets alternative
requirements established in § 3282.407.
(2) If the Secretary or SAA orders a
manufacturer to provide notification in
accordance with the procedures in
§§ 3282.412 and 3282.413, the Secretary or
SAA has the option of requiring a
manufacturer to prepare and receive approval
on a plan for notification.
(d) Method of notification. When a
manufacturer provides notification as
required under this section, notification must
be:
(1) By certified mail or other more
expeditious means to each retailer or
distributor to whom any manufactured home
in the class of homes containing the defect,
serious defect, or imminent safety hazard was
delivered;
(2) By certified or express mail to the first
purchaser of each manufactured home in the
class of manufactured homes containing the
defect, serious defect, or imminent safety
hazard, and, to the extent feasible, to any
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subsequent owner to whom any warranty
provided by the manufacturer or required by
Federal, State, or local law on such
manufactured home has been transferred,
except that notification need not be sent to
any person known by the manufacturer not
to own the manufactured home in question
if the manufacturer has a record of a
subsequent owner of the manufactured home;
and
(3) By certified or express mail to each
other person who is a registered owner of a
manufactured home in the class of homes
containing the defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard and whose name has
been ascertained pursuant to § 3282.211 or is
known to the manufacturer.
§ 3282.406 Required manufacturer
correction.
(a) Correction of noncompliances and
defects. (1) Section 3282.415 sets out
requirements with respect to a
manufacturer’s correction of any
noncompliance or defect that exists in each
manufactured home that has been sold or
otherwise released to a retailer but that has
not yet been sold to a purchaser.
(2) In accordance with section 623 of the
Act and the regulations in part 3288 of this
chapter, the manufacturer, retailer, or
installer of a manufactured home must
correct, at its expense, each failure in the
performance, construction, components, or
material of the home that renders the home
or any part of the home not fit for the
ordinary use for which it was intended and
that is reported during the 1-year period
beginning on the date of installation of the
home.
(b) Correction of serious defects and
imminent safety hazards. (1) A manufacturer
required to furnish notification under
§ 3282.405 or § 3282.413 must correct, at its
expense, any serious defect or imminent
safety hazard that can be related to an error
in design or assembly of the manufactured
home by the manufacturer, including an error
in design or assembly of any component or
system incorporated into the manufactured
home by the manufacturer.
(2) If while making corrections under any
of the provisions of this subpart, the
manufacturer creates an imminent safety
hazard or serious defect, the manufacturer
shall correct the imminent safety hazard or
serious defect.
(3) Each serious defect or imminent safety
hazard corrected under this paragraph must
be brought into compliance with applicable
Standards or, where the Standards are not
specific, with the manufacturer’s approved
design.
(c) Inclusion in plan. (1) In the plan
required by § 3282.408, the manufacturer
must provide for correction of those homes
that are required to be corrected pursuant to
paragraph (b) of this section.
(2) If the Secretary or SAA orders a
manufacturer to provide correction in
accordance with the procedures in
§ 3282.413, the Secretary or SAA has the
option of requiring a manufacturer to prepare
and receive approval on a plan for correction.
(d) Corrections by owners. A manufacturer
that is required to make corrections under
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paragraph (b) of this section or that elects to
make corrections in accordance with
§ 3282.407 must reimburse any owner of an
affected manufactured home who chose to
make the correction before the manufacturer
did so for the reasonable cost of correction.
(e) Correction of appliances, components,
or systems. (1) If any appliance, component,
or system in a manufactured home is covered
by a product warranty, the manufacturer,
retailer, or installer that is responsible under
this section for correcting a noncompliance,
a defect, a serious defect, or an imminent
safety hazard in the appliance, component, or
system may seek the required correction
directly from the producer. The SAA that
approves any plan of notification required
pursuant to § 3282.408 or the Secretary, as
applicable, may establish reasonable time
limits for the manufacturer of the home and
the producer of the appliance, component, or
system to agree on who is to make the
correction and for completing the correction.
(2) Nothing in this section shall prevent the
manufacturer, retailer, or installer from
seeking indemnification from the producer of
the appliance, component, or system for
correction work done on any appliance,
component, or system.
§ 3282.407 Voluntary compliance with the
notification and correction requirements
under the Act.
A manufacturer that takes corrective action
that complies with one of the following three
alternatives to the requirement in § 3282.408
for preparing a plan will be deemed to have
provided any notification required by
§ 3282.405:
(a) Voluntary action—one home. When a
manufacturer has made a determination that
only one manufactured home is involved, the
manufacturer is not required to provide
notification pursuant to § 3282.405 or to
prepare or submit a plan if:
(1) The manufacturer has made a
determination of defect; or
(2) The manufacturer has made a
determination of serious defect or imminent
safety hazard and corrects the home within
the 20-day period. The manufacturer must
maintain, in the plant where the
manufactured home was manufactured, a
complete record of the correction. The record
must describe briefly the facts of the case and
any known cause of the serious defect or
imminent safety hazard and state what
corrective actions were taken, and it must be
maintained in the service records in a form
that will allow the Secretary or an SAA to
review all such corrections.
(b) Voluntary action—multiple homes.
Regardless of whether a plan has been
submitted under § 3282.408, the
manufacturer may act prior to obtaining
approval of the plan. Such action is subject
to review and disapproval by the SAA of the
State where the home was manufactured or
the Secretary, unless the manufacturer
obtains the written agreement of the SAA or
the Secretary that the corrective action is
adequate. If such an agreement is obtained,
the correction must be accepted as adequate
by all SAA’s and the Secretary if the
manufacturer makes the correction as agreed
to and any imminent safety hazard or serious
defect is eliminated.
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(c) Waiver. (1) A manufacturer may obtain
a waiver of the notification requirements in
§ 3282.405 and the plan requirements in
§ 3282.408 either from the SAA of the State
of manufacture, when all of the
manufactured homes that would be covered
by the plan were manufactured in that State,
or from the Secretary. As of the date of a
request for a waiver, the notification and plan
requirements are deferred pending timely
submission of any additional documentation
as the SAA or the Secretary may require and
final resolution of the waiver request. If a
waiver request is not granted, the plan
required by § 3282.408 must be submitted
within 5 days after the expiration of the time
period established in § 3282.408 if the
manufacturer is notified that the request was
not granted.
(2) The waiver may be approved if not later
than 20 days after making the determination
that notification is required, the
manufacturer presents evidence that it in
good faith believes would show to the
satisfaction of the SAA or the Secretary that:
(i) The manufacturer has identified all
homes that would be covered by the plan in
accordance with § 3282.408;
(ii) The manufacturer will correct, at its
expense, all of the identified homes, either
within 60 days of being informed that the
request for waiver has been granted or within
another time limit approved in the waiver;
and
(iii) The proposed repairs are adequate to
remove the defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard that gave rise to the
determination that correction is required; and
(3) The manufacturer must correct all
affected manufactured homes within 60 days
of being informed that the request for waiver
has been granted or the time limit approved
in the waiver, as applicable. The
manufacturer must record the known cause
of the problem and the correction in the
service records in an approved form that will
allow the Secretary or SAA to review the
cause and correction.
§ 3282.408 Plan of notification required.
(a) Manufacturer’s plan required. Except as
provided in § 3282.407, if a manufacturer
determines that it is responsible for
providing notification under § 3282.405, the
manufacturer must prepare a plan in
accordance with this section and § 3282.409.
The manufacturer must, as soon as practical,
but not later than 20 days after making the
determination of defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard, submit the plan for
approval to one of the following, as
appropriate:
(1) The SAA of the State of manufacture,
when all of the manufactured homes covered
by the plan were manufactured in that State;
or
(2) The Secretary, when the manufactured
homes were manufactured in more than one
State or there is no SAA in the State of
manufacture.
(b) Implementation of plan. Upon approval
of the plan, including any changes for cause
required by the Secretary or SAA after
consultation with the manufacturer, the
manufacturer must carry out the approved
plan within the agreed time limits.
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§ 3282.409 Contents of plan.
(a) Purpose of plan. This section sets out
the requirements that must be met by a
manufacturer in preparing any plan it is
required to submit under § 3282.408. The
underlying requirement is that the plan
shows how the manufacturer will fulfill its
responsibilities with respect to notification
and correction.
(b) Contents of plan. The plan must:
(1) Identify, by serial number and other
appropriate identifying criteria, all
manufactured homes for which notification
is to be provided, as determined pursuant to
§ 3282.404;
(2) Include a copy of the notice that the
manufacturer proposes to use to provide the
notification required by § 3282.405;
(3) Provide for correction of those
manufactured homes that are required to be
corrected pursuant to § 3282.406(b);
(4) Include the IPIA’s written concurrence
or statement on the methods used by the
manufacturer to identify the homes that
should be included in the class of homes, as
required pursuant to § 3282.404(b); and
(5) Include a deadline for completion of all
notifications and corrections.
(c) Contents of notice. Except as otherwise
agreed by the Secretary or the SAA reviewing
the plan under § 3282.408, the notice to be
approved as part of the plan must include the
following:
(1) An opening statement that reads: ‘‘This
notice is sent to you in accordance with the
requirements of the National Manufactured
Housing Construction and Safety Standards
Act.’’;
(2) The following statement: ‘‘[choose one,
as appropriate: Manufacturer’s name, or the
Secretary, or the (insert State) SAA] has
determined that [insert identifying criteria of
manufactured home] may not comply with
an applicable Federal Manufactured Home
Construction or Safety Standard.’’
(3) Except when the manufacturer is
providing notice pursuant to an approved
plan or agreement with the Secretary or an
SAA under § 3282.408, each applicable
statement as follows:
(i) ‘‘An imminent safety hazard may exist
in (identifying criteria of manufactured
home).’’
(ii) ‘‘A serious defect may exist in
(identifying criteria of manufactured home).’’
(iii) ‘‘A defect may exist in (identifying
criteria of manufactured home).’’
(4) A clear description of the defect,
serious defect, or imminent safety hazard and
an explanation of the risk to the occupants,
which must include:
(i) The location of the defect, serious
defect, or imminent safety hazard in the
manufactured home;
(ii) A description of any hazards,
malfunctions, deterioration, or other
consequences that may reasonably be
expected to result from the defect, serious
defect, or imminent safety hazard;
(iii) A statement of the conditions that may
cause such consequences to arise; and
(iv) Precautions, if any, that the owner can,
should, or must take to reduce the chance
that the consequences will arise before the
manufactured home is repaired;
(5) A statement of whether there will be
any warning that a dangerous occurrence
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34469
may take place and what that warning would
be, and any signs that the owner might see,
hear, smell, or feel which might indicate
danger or deterioration of the manufactured
home as a result of the defect, serious defect,
or imminent safety hazard;
(6) A statement that the manufacturer will
correct the manufactured home, if the
manufacturer will correct the manufactured
home under this subpart or otherwise;
(7) A statement in accordance with
whichever of the following is appropriate:
(i) Where the manufacturer will correct the
manufactured home at no cost to the owner,
the statement must indicate how and when
the correction will be done, how long the
correction will take, and any other
information that may be helpful to the owner;
or
(ii) When the manufacturer does not bear
the cost of repair, the notification must
include a detailed description of all parts and
materials needed to make the correction, a
description of all steps to be followed in
making the correction including appropriate
illustrations, and an estimate of the cost of
the purchaser or owner of the correction;
(8) A statement informing the owner that
the owner may submit a complaint to the
SAA or Secretary if the owner believes that:
(i) The notification or the remedy
described therein is inadequate;
(ii) The manufacturer has failed or is
unable to remedy the problem in accordance
with its notification; or
(iii) The manufacturer has failed or is
unable to remedy within a reasonable time
after the owner’s first attempt to obtain
remedy; and
(9) A statement that any actions taken by
the manufacturer under the Act in no way
limit the rights of the owner or any other
person under any contract or other applicable
law and that the owner may have further
rights under contract or other applicable law.
§ 3282.410 Implementation of plan.
(a) Deadline for notifications. (1) The
manufacturer must complete the notifications
carried out under a plan approved by an SAA
or the Secretary under § 3282.408 on or
before the deadline approved by the SAA or
Secretary. In approving each deadline, an
SAA or the Secretary will allow a reasonable
time to complete all notifications, taking into
account the number of manufactured homes
involved and the difficulty of completing the
notifications.
(2) The manufacturer must, at the time of
dispatch, furnish to the SAA or the Secretary
a true or representative copy of each notice,
bulletin, and other written communication
sent to retailers, distributors, or owners of
manufactured homes regarding any serious
defect or imminent safety hazard that may
exist in any homes produced by the
manufacturer, or regarding any
noncompliance or defect for which the SAA
or Secretary requires, under § 3282.413(c),
the manufacturer to submit a plan for
providing notification.
(b) Deadline for corrections. A
manufacturer that is required to correct a
serious defect or imminent safety hazard
pursuant to § 3282.406(b) must complete
implementation of the plan required by
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§ 3282.408 on or before the deadline
approved by the SAA or the Secretary. The
deadline must be no later than 60 days after
approval of the plan. In approving the
deadline, the SAA or the Secretary will allow
a reasonable amount of time to complete the
plan, taking into account the seriousness of
the problem, the number of manufactured
homes involved, the immediacy of any risk,
and the difficulty of completing the action.
The seriousness and immediacy of any risk
posed by the serious defect or imminent
safety hazard will be given greater weight
than other considerations.
(c) Extensions. An SAA that approved a
plan or the Secretary may grant an extension
of the deadlines included in a plan if the
manufacturer requests such an extension in
writing and shows good cause for the
extension, and the SAA or the Secretary
decides that the extension is justified and is
not contrary to the public interest. When the
Secretary grants an extension for completion
of any corrections, the Secretary will notify
the manufacturer and must publish notice of
such extension in the Federal Register. When
an SAA grants an extension for completion
of any corrections, the SAA must notify the
Secretary and the manufacturer.
(d) Recordkeeping. The manufacturer must
provide the report and maintain the records
that are required by § 3282.417 for all
notification and correction actions.
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§ 3282.411 Administrative initiation of
remedial action.
(a) Administrative review of information.
Whenever the Secretary or an SAA has
information indicating the possible existence
of a noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard in a manufactured
home, the Secretary or SAA may initiate
administrative review of the need for
notification and correction in accordance
with paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.
(b) SAA authority. (1) An SAA that decides
to initiate such administrative review must
refer the matter to the SAA in the state of
manufacture or, whenever the affected
manufactured homes were manufactured in
more than one state, to the Secretary for
possible action pursuant to § 3282.412.
(2) An SAA in a State of manufacture is
permitted to issue a preliminary
determination in accordance with § 3282.412
under the following circumstances:
(i) The SAA believes that a manufactured
home that has been sold or otherwise
released by a manufacturer to a retailer or
distributor, but for which there is no
completed sale to a purchaser, contains a
noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard;
(ii) The SAA believes that the information
referenced in paragraph (a) of this section
indicates a class of homes in which a
noncompliance or defect possibly exists;
(iii) The SAA believes that the information
referenced in paragraph (a) of this section
indicates one or more homes in which a
serious defect or an imminent safety hazard
possibly exists;
(iv) The SAA is reviewing a plan under
§ 3282.408 and the SAA and manufacturer
disagree on proposed changes to the plan;
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(v) The SAA believes that the manufacturer
has failed to fulfill the requirements of a
waiver granted under § 3282.407; or
(vi) There is evidence that a manufacturer
in the State failed to make the determinations
required under § 3282.404.
(3) For purposes of this paragraph (b), the
conclusion that there is a class of homes in
which a noncompliance or defect possibly
exists must be based on the same factors that
are established for a manufacturer’s class
determination in § 3282.404(b). If evidence
arises that the manufactured homes in the
class were manufactured in more than one
state, the SAA must refer the matter to the
Secretary for any further action.
(4) An SAA that issues a preliminary
determination must provide a copy of the
preliminary determination to the Secretary at
the time of its issuance. Failure to comply
with this requirement does not affect the
validity of the preliminary determination.
(c) Secretary authority. The Secretary may
make a preliminary determination in
accordance with § 3282.412 when:
(1) There is evidence that a
noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard possibly exists in any
manufactured home; or
(2) There is evidence that the manufacturer
failed to make the determinations required
under § 3282.404.
(d) Secretary notification. The Secretary
will notify the SAA of each State where the
affected homes were manufactured and, to
the extent it is reasonable, the SAA of each
State where the homes are located of the
issuance of a preliminary determination.
Failure to comply with this requirement does
not affect the validity of the preliminary
determination.
§ 3282.412 Preliminary and final
administrative determinations.
(a) Issuance of preliminary determination.
In accordance with § 3282.411, the Secretary
or an SAA may issue a Notice of Preliminary
Determination when:
(1) The manufacturer has not provided to
the Secretary or SAA the necessary
information to make a determination that:
(i) A noncompliance, defect, serious defect,
or imminent safety hazard possibly exists; or
(ii) A manufacturer had information that
likely indicates a noncompliance, defect,
serious defect, or imminent safety hazard for
which the manufacturer failed to make the
determinations required under § 3282.404; or
(2) The Secretary or SAA has information
that likely indicates a noncompliance, a
defect, a serious defect, or an imminent
safety hazard exists.
(b) Notice of Preliminary Determination. (1)
The Notice of Preliminary Determination
must be sent by certified mail or express
delivery and must:
(i) Include the factual basis for the
determination;
(ii) Include the criteria used to identify any
class of homes in which the noncompliance,
defect, serious defect, or imminent safety
hazard possibly exists;
(iii) If applicable, indicate that the
manufacturer may be required to make
corrections on a home or in a class of homes;
and
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(iv) If the preliminary determination is that
the manufacturer failed to make an initial
determination required under § 3282.404(a),
include an allegation that the manufacturer
failed to act in good faith.
(2) The Notice of Preliminary
Determination must inform the manufacturer
that the preliminary determination will
become final unless the manufacturer
requests a hearing or presentation of views
under subpart D of this part.
(c) Presentation of views. (1) The Secretary
or the SAA, as applicable, must receive the
manufacturer’s request for a hearing or
presentation of views:
(i) Within 15 days of delivery of the Notice
of Preliminary Determination of serious
defect, defect, or noncompliance; or
(ii) Within 5 days of delivery of the Notice
of Preliminary Determination of imminent
safety hazard.
(2) A Formal or an Informal Presentation of
Views will be held in accordance with
§ 3282.152 promptly upon receipt of a
manufacturer’s request under paragraph (c) of
this section.
(d) Issuance of Final Determination. (1)
The SAA or the Secretary, as appropriate,
may make a Final Determination that an
imminent safety hazard, serious defect,
defect, or noncompliance exists, or that the
manufacturer failed to make the
determinations required under § 3282.404, if:
(i) The manufacturer fails to respond to the
Notice of Preliminary Determination within
the time period established in paragraph
(c)(2) of this section; or
(ii) The SAA or the Secretary decides that
the views and evidence presented by the
manufacturer or others are insufficient to
rebut the preliminary determination.
(2) At the time that the SAA or Secretary
makes a Final Determination that an
imminent safety hazard, serious defect,
defect, or noncompliance exists, the SAA or
Secretary, as appropriate, must issue an order
in accordance with § 3282.413.
§ 3282.413 Implementation of Final
Determination.
(a) Issuance of orders. (1) The SAA or the
Secretary, as appropriate, must issue an order
directing the manufacturer to furnish
notification if:
(i) The SAA makes a Final Determination
that a defect or noncompliance exists in a
class of homes;
(ii) The Secretary makes a Final
Determination that an imminent safety
hazard, serious defect, defect, or
noncompliance exists; or
(iii) The SAA makes a Final Determination
that an imminent safety hazard or serious
defect exists in any home and the SAA has
received the Secretary’s concurrence on the
issuance of the Final Determination and
order.
(2) The SAA or the Secretary, as
appropriate, must issue an order directing the
manufacturer to make corrections in any
affected manufactured home if:
(i) The SAA or the Secretary makes a Final
Determination that a defect or
noncompliance exists in a manufactured
home that has been sold or otherwise
released by a manufacturer to a retailer or
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distributor but for which the sale to a
purchaser has not been completed;
(ii) The Secretary makes a Final
Determination that an imminent safety
hazard or serious defect exists; or
(iii) The SAA makes a Final Determination
that an imminent safety hazard or serious
defect exists in any home and the SAA has
received the Secretary’s concurrence on the
issuance of the Final Determination and
order.
(3) Only the Secretary may issue an order
directing a manufacturer to repurchase or
replace any manufactured home already sold
to a purchaser, unless the Secretary
authorizes an SAA to issue such an order.
(4) An SAA that has a concurrence or
authorization from the Secretary on any order
issued under this section must have the
Secretary’s concurrence on any subsequent
changes to the order. An SAA that has issued
a Preliminary Determination must have the
Secretary’s concurrence on any waiver of
notification or any settlement when the
concerns addressed in the Preliminary
Determination involve a serious defect or an
imminent safety hazard.
(5) If an SAA or the Secretary makes a
Final Determination that the manufacturer
failed to make in good faith an initial
determination required under § 3282.404(a):
(i) The SAA may impose any penalties or
take any action applicable under State law
and may refer the matter to the Secretary for
appropriate action; and
(ii) The Secretary may take any action
permitted by law.
(b) Decision to order replacement or
repurchase. The SAA or the Secretary will
order correction of any manufactured home
covered by an order issued in accordance
with paragraph (a) of this section unless any
requirements and factors applicable under
§ 3282.414 and § 3282.415 indicate that the
SAA or the Secretary should order
replacement or repurchase of the home.
(c) Time for compliance with order. (1) The
SAA or the Secretary may require the
manufacturer to submit a plan for providing
any notification and any correction,
replacement, or repurchase remedy that
results from an order under this section. The
manufacturer’s plan must include the
method and date by which notification and
any corrective action will be provided.
(2) The manufacturer must provide any
such notification and correction,
replacement, or repurchase remedy as early
as practicable, but not later than:
(i) Thirty (30) days, in the case of a Final
Determination of imminent safety hazard or
when the SAA or Secretary has ordered
replacement or repurchase of a home
pursuant to § 3282.414; or
(ii) Sixty (60) days, in the case of a Final
Determination of serious defect, defect, or
noncompliance.
(3) Subject to the requirements of
paragraph (a)(3) of this section, the SAA that
issued the order or the Secretary may grant
an extension of the deadline for compliance
with an order if:
(i) The manufacturer requests such an
extension in writing and shows good cause
for the extension; and
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(ii) The SAA or the Secretary is satisfied
that the extension is justified in the public
interest.
(4) When the SAA grants an extension, it
must notify the manufacturer and forward to
the Secretary a draft of a notice of the
extension for the Secretary to publish in the
Federal Register. When the Secretary grants
an extension, the Secretary must notify the
manufacturer and publish notice of such
extension in the Federal Register.
(d) Appeal of SAA determination. Within
10 days of a manufacturer receiving notice
that an SAA has made a Final Determination
that an imminent safety hazard, serious
defect, defect, or noncompliance exists or
that the manufacturer failed to make the
determinations required under § 3282.404,
the manufacturer may appeal the Final
Determination to the Secretary under
§ 3282.309.
(e) Settlement offers. A manufacturer may
propose in writing, at any time, an offer of
settlement which shall be submitted to and
considered by the Secretary or the SAA that
issued the Notice of Preliminary
Determination. The Secretary or the SAA has
the option of providing the manufacturer
making the offer with an opportunity to make
an oral presentation in support of such offer.
If the manufacturer is notified that an offer
of settlement is rejected, the offer is deemed
to have been withdrawn and will not
constitute a part of the record in the
proceeding. Final acceptance by the
Secretary or an SAA of any offer of
settlement automatically terminates any
proceedings related to the matter involved in
the settlement.
(f) Waiver of notification. (1) At any time
after the Secretary or an SAA has issued a
Notice of Preliminary Determination, the
manufacturer may request the Secretary or
SAA to waive any formal notification
requirements. When requesting a waiver, the
manufacturer must certify that:
(i) The manufacturer has made a class
determination in accordance with
§ 3282.404(b);
(ii) The manufacturer will correct, at the
manufacturer’s expense, all affected
manufactured homes in the class within a
time period that is specified by the Secretary
or SAA, but is not later than 60 days after
the manufacturer is notified of the
acceptance of the request for waiver or the
issuance of any Final Determination,
whichever is later; and
(iii) The proposed repairs are adequate to
correct the noncompliance, defect, serious
defect, or imminent safety hazard that gave
rise to the issuance of the Notice of
Preliminary Determination.
(2) If the Secretary or SAA grant a waiver,
the manufacturer must reimburse any owner
of an affected manufactured home who chose
to make the correction before the
manufacturer did so for the reasonable cost
of correction.
(g) Recordkeeping. The manufacturer must
provide the report and maintain the records
that are required by § 3282.417 for all
notification and correction actions.
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§ 3282.414 Replacement or repurchase of
homes after sale to purchaser.
(a) Order to replace or repurchase.
Whenever a manufacturer cannot fully
correct an imminent safety hazard or a
serious defect in a manufactured home for
which there is a completed sale to a
purchaser within 60 days of the issuance of
an order under § 3282.413 or any extension
of the 60-day deadline that has been granted
by the Secretary in accordance with
§ 3282.413(c), the Secretary or, if authorized
in writing by the Secretary in accordance
with § 3282.413(a)(3), the SAA may require
that the manufacturer:
(1) Replace the manufactured home with a
home that:
(i) Is substantially equal in size,
equipment, and quality; and
(ii) Either is new or is in the same
condition that the defective manufactured
home would have been in at the time of
discovery of the imminent safety hazard or
serious defect had the imminent safety
hazard or serious defect not existed; or
(2) Take possession of the manufactured
home, if the Secretary or the SAA so orders,
and refund the purchase price in full, except
that the amount of the purchase price may be
reduced by a reasonable amount for
depreciation if the home has been in the
possession of the owner for more than 1 year
and the amount of depreciation is based on:
(i) Actual use of the home; and
(ii) An appraisal system approved by the
Secretary or the SAA that does not take into
account damage or deterioration resulting
from the imminent safety hazard or serious
defect.
(b) Factors affecting order. In determining
whether to order replacement or refund by
the manufacturer, the Secretary or the SAA
will consider:
(1) The threat of injury or death to
manufactured home occupants;
(2) Any costs and inconvenience to
manufactured home owners that will result
from the lack of adequate repair within the
specified period;
(3) The expense to the manufacturer;
(4) Any obligations imposed on the
manufacturer under contract or other
applicable law of which the Secretary or the
SAA has knowledge; and
(5) Any other relevant factors that may be
brought to the attention of the Secretary or
the SAA.
(c) Owner’s election of remedy. When
under contract or other applicable law the
owner has the right of election between
replacement and refund, the manufacturer
must inform the owner of such right of
election and must inform the Secretary of the
election, if any, made by the owner.
(d) Recordkeeping. The manufacturer must
provide the report that is required by
§ 3282.417 when a manufactured home has
been replaced or repurchased under this
section.
§ 3282.415 Correction of homes before sale
to purchaser.
(a) Sale or lease prohibited. Manufacturers,
retailers, and distributors must not sell, lease,
or offer for sale or lease any manufactured
home that they have reason to know in the
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exercise of due care contains a
noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or an
imminent safety hazard. The sale of a home
to a purchaser is complete when all
contractual obligations of the manufacturer,
retailer, and distributor to the purchaser have
been met.
(b) Retailer/distributor notification to
manufacturer. When a retailer, acting as a
reasonable retailer, or a distributor, acting as
a reasonable distributor, believes that a
manufactured home that has been sold to the
retailer or distributor, but for which there is
no completed sale to a purchaser, likely
contains a noncompliance, defect, serious
defect, or an imminent safety hazard, the
retailer or distributor must notify the
manufacturer of the home in a timely
manner.
(c) Manufacturer’s remedial
responsibilities. Upon a Final Determination
pursuant to § 3282.412 by the Secretary or an
SAA, a determination by a court of
appropriate jurisdiction, or a manufacturer’s
own determination that a manufactured
home that has been sold to a retailer but for
which there is no completed sale to a
purchaser contains a noncompliance, defect,
serious defect, or an imminent safety hazard,
if caused by the manufacturer or a person
working on behalf of the manufacturer, or
when the retailer/distributor has not made
the corrections for the problems they cause,
the manufacturer must do one of the
following:
(1) Immediately repurchase such
manufactured home from the retailer or
distributor at the price paid by the retailer or
distributor, plus all transportation charges
involved, if any, and a reasonable
reimbursement of not less than 1 percent per
month of such price paid prorated from the
date the manufacturer receives notice by
certified mail of the noncompliance, defect,
serious defect, or imminent safety hazard; or
(2) At its expense, immediately furnish to
the retailer or distributor all required parts or
equipment for installation in the home by the
retailer or distributor, and the manufacturer
must reimburse the retailer or distributor for
the reasonable value of the retailer’s or
distributor’s work, plus a reasonable
reimbursement of not less than 1 percent per
month of the manufacturer’s or distributor’s
selling price prorated from the date the
manufacturer receives notice by certified
mail to the date the noncompliance, defect,
serious defect, or imminent safety hazard is
corrected, so long as the retailer or distributor
proceeds with reasonable diligence with the
required work; or
(3) Carry out all needed corrections to the
home.
(d) Retailer/distributor responsibilities.
Upon a Final Determination pursuant to
3282.412 by the Secretary or an SAA, a
determination by a court of appropriate
jurisdiction, or an agreement reached under
section 623(c)(12) of the Act [Dispute
Resolution] that a retailer/distributor is
responsible for taking a home out of
compliance with the construction standards
and that the home contains a noncompliance,
defect, serious defect, or an imminent safety
hazard, the retailer/distributor must, before it
is permitted to sell the home:
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(1) At its expense, immediately obtain
approved designs or instructions from the
manufacturer and all required parts and
equipment for correction of the home and
reimburse the manufacturer or the person
authorized by the manufacturer to make the
corrections on the home; or
(2) Carry out all needed corrections to the
home when approved by the manufacturer.
(e) Establishing costs. The value of
reasonable reimbursements as specified in
paragraph (c) of this section will be fixed by
either:
(1) Mutual agreement of the manufacturer
and retailer or distributor; or
(2) A court in an action brought under
section 613(b) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 5412(b)).
(f) Records required. The manufacturer and
the retailer or distributor must maintain
records of their actions taken under this
section in accordance with § 3282.417.
(g) Exception for leased homes. This
section does not apply to any manufactured
home purchased by a retailer or distributor
that has been leased by such retailer or
distributor to a tenant for purposes other than
resale. Other remedies that may be available
to a retailer or distributor under subpart I of
this part continue to be applicable.
(h) Indemnification. A manufacturer may
indemnify itself through agreements or
contracts with retailers, distributors,
transporters, installers, or others for the costs
of repurchase, parts, equipment, and
corrective work incurred by the manufacturer
pursuant to paragraph (c).
§ 3282.416 Oversight of notification and
correction activities.
(a) IPIA responsibilities. The IPIA in each
manufacturing plant must:
(1) Assure that notifications required under
this subpart I are sent to all owners,
purchasers, retailers, and distributors of
whom the manufacturer has knowledge;
(2) Audit the certificates required by
§ 3282.417 to assure that the manufacturer
has made required corrections;
(3) Whenever a manufacturer is required to
determine a class of homes pursuant to
§ 3282.404(b), provide either:
(i) The IPIA’s written concurrence on the
methods used by the manufacturer to identify
the homes that should be included in the
class of homes; or
(ii) The IPIA’s written statement explaining
why it believes the manufacturer’s methods
for determining the class of homes were
inappropriate or inadequate; and
(4) Periodically review the manufacturer’s
service records of determinations under
§ 3282.404 and take appropriate action in
accordance with §§ 3282.362(c) and
3282.364.
(b) SAA and Secretary’s responsibilities. (1)
SAA oversight of manufacturer compliance
with this subpart I will be done primarily by
periodically checking the records that
manufacturers are required to keep under
§ 3282.417.
(2) The SAA or Secretary to which the
report required by § 3282.417(a) is sent is
responsible for assuring through oversight
that remedial actions have been carried out
as described in the report. The SAA of the
State in which an affected manufactured
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home is located may inspect that home to
determine whether any correction required
under this subpart I is carried out in
accordance with the approved plan or, if
there is no plan, to the Standards or other
approval obtained by the manufacturer.
§ 3282.417 Recordkeeping requirements.
(a) Manufacturer report on notifications
and corrections. Within 30 days after the
deadline for completing any notifications,
corrections, replacement, or repurchase
required pursuant to this subpart I, the
manufacturer must provide a complete report
of the action taken to, as appropriate, the
Secretary or the SAA that approved the plan
under § 3282.408, granted a waiver, or issued
the order under § 3282.413. If any other SAA
or the Secretary forwarded the relevant
consumer complaint or other information to
the manufacturer in accordance with
§ 3282.403, the manufacturer must send a
copy of the report to that SAA or the
Secretary, as applicable.
(b) Records of manufacturer’s
determinations. (1) A manufacturer must
record each initial and class determination
required under § 3282.404 in its service
records, in a manner approved by the
Secretary or an SAA and that identifies who
made each determination, what each
determination was, and all bases for each
determination. Such information must be
available for review by the IPIA.
(2) The manufacturer records must include:
(i) The information it received that likely
indicated a noncompliance, defect, serious
defect, or imminent safety hazard;
(ii) All of the manufacturer’s
determinations and each basis for those
determinations;
(iii) The methods used by the manufacturer
to establish any class, including, when
applicable, the cause of the defect, serious
defect, or imminent safety hazard; and
(iv) Any IPIA concurrence or statement
that it does not concur with the
manufacturer’s class determination, in
accordance with § 3282.404(b).
(c) Manufacturer records of notifications.
When a manufacturer is required to provide
notification under this subpart, the
manufacturer must maintain in its files a
copy of each type of notice sent and a
complete list of the persons notified and their
addresses. The manufacturer must maintain
these records in a manner approved by the
Secretary or an SAA to identify each
notification campaign.
(d) Manufacturer records of corrections.
When a manufacturer is required to provide
or provides correction under this subpart, the
manufacturer must maintain in its files one
of the following, as appropriate, for each
manufactured home involved:
(1) If the correction is made, a certification
by the manufacturer that the repair was made
to conform to the Federal construction and
safety standards in effect at the time the
home was manufactured and that each
identified imminent safety hazard or serious
defect has been corrected; or
(2) If the owner refuses to allow the
manufacturer to repair the home, a
certification by the manufacturer that:
(i) The owner has been informed of the
problem that may exist in the home;
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(ii) The owner has been provided with a
description of any hazards, malfunctions,
deterioration, or other consequences that may
reasonably be expected to result from the
defect, serious defect, or imminent safety
hazard; and
(iii) An attempt has been made to repair
the problems, but the owner has refused the
repair.
(e) Retailer and distributor records of
corrections. When a retailer or distributor
makes corrections necessary to bring a
manufactured home into compliance with
the Standards, the retailer or distributor must
maintain a complete record of its actions.
(f) Length of retention. Records of the
information and any other records required
to be maintained by this subpart must be kept
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for a minimum of 5 years from the date the
manufacturer, retailer, or distributor, as
applicable:
(1) Received the information;
(2) Creates the record; or
(3) Completes the notification or correction
campaign.
§ 3282.418 Factors for appropriateness and
amount of civil penalties.
In determining whether to seek a civil
penalty for a violation of the requirements of
this subpart I, and the amount of such
penalty to be recommended, the Secretary
will consider the provisions of the Act and
the following factors:
(a) The gravity of the violation;
(b) The degree of the violator’s culpability,
including whether the violator had acted in
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34473
good faith in trying to comply with the
requirements;
(c) The injury to the public;
(d) Any injury to owners or occupants of
manufactured homes;
(e) The ability to pay the penalty;
(f) Any benefits received by the violator;
(g) The extent of potential benefits to other
persons;
(h) Any history of prior violations;
(i) Deterrence of future violations; and
(j) Such other factors as justice may
require.
[End of MHCC recommended text.]
[FR Doc. 06–5390 Filed 6–9–06; 1:27 pm]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 114 (Wednesday, June 14, 2006)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 34464-34473]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-5390]
[[Page 34463]]
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Part IV
Department of Housing and Urban Development
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24 CFR Part 3282
Manufactured Housing Consensus Committee--Rejection of Subpart I
Proposal; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 114 / Wednesday, June 14, 2006 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 34464]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Part 3282
[Docket No. FR-5072-N-01]
Manufactured Housing Consensus Committee--Rejection of Subpart I
Proposal
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Housing--Federal Housing
Commissioner, HUD.
ACTION: Notice of rejection of Manufactured Housing Consensus Committee
recommendation of proposed regulation.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Manufactured Housing Consensus Committee (MHCC) has
submitted to HUD recommended regulatory text that would revise HUD's
current Subpart I regulations that implement statutory requirements
concerning how manufacturers and others address reports of problems
with manufactured homes, including notifications to consumers and
correction of safety defects and of homes that fail to meet the Federal
construction and safety standards. The National Manufactured Housing
Construction and Safety Standards Act of 1974 expressly limits HUD to
either accepting such an MHCC recommendation in its entirety for
publication as a proposed rule, or rejecting the recommendation,
providing the MHCC a written explanation of the reasons for rejection,
and publishing in the Federal Register the rejected proposal, the
reasons for rejection, and any recommended modifications. The Secretary
commends the careful work of the MHCC on this initiative and would
accept almost all of the MHCC's recommendation. HUD has met with the
MHCC numerous times on these regulations, and the Department and the
MHCC have worked together to draft a clear and comprehensive revision
of these regulations. However, because HUD believes that certain
language included in the MHCC recommendation is contrary to the
statute, HUD cannot accept the proposal. Nevertheless, in accordance
with a different statutory procedure that is available, and in an
effort to resolve the remaining differences between what HUD could
accept and what was included in the MHCC recommendation, HUD has also
submitted to the MHCC for its review a HUD proposal for revision of
subpart I that is based on the MHCC recommendation, with a few
modifications as discussed in this notice.
As required by the statute, the full text of the MHCC's
recommendation is set forth in this notice for informational purposes,
along with HUD's reasons for not accepting all of the recommendations
and an explanation of the modifications HUD has suggested to the MHCC.
A set of principles that the MHCC drafted to guide its development of
its recommendation is also set out in this notice. In accordance with
statutory procedure, after HUD has received the MHCC's comments on
HUD's proposal to revise Subpart I and HUD has considered those
comments, HUD expects to publish separately a proposed rule revising
Subpart I for public comment.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: William W. Matchneer III, Associate
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Regulatory Affairs, Office of Regulatory
Affairs and Manufactured Housing, Room 9164, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 20410;
telephone (202) 708-6401 (this is not a toll free number). Persons with
hearing or speech impairments may access this number via TTY by calling
the toll-free Federal Information Relay Service at 800-877-8389.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Manufactured Housing Consensus Committee
(MHCC) was established by the National Manufactured Housing
Construction and Safety Standards Act of 1974, 42 U.S.C. 5401-5426 (the
Act), for the purpose of providing periodic recommendations to the
Secretary to adopt, revise, and interpret the Federal manufactured
housing construction and safety standards and the procedural and
enforcement regulations. 42 U.S.C. 5403(a)(3)(A). The MHCC may submit
to the Secretary proposed procedural and enforcement regulations and
recommendations for the revision of the regulations. 42 U.S.C.
5403(b)(1). To be promulgated by the Department, the regulations and
revisions recommended by the MHCC must be consistent with the Act.
When the Secretary receives a proposed procedural or enforcement
regulation from the MHCC, the Secretary must either approve the
proposal with no modification or reject the proposal. If the Secretary
rejects the proposal, HUD must provide to the MHCC a written
explanation of the reasons for rejection and publish the proposal, the
reasons for rejection, and recommended modifications in the Federal
Register. 42 U.S.C. 5403(b)(4).
The MHCC has transmitted to the Secretary a recommendation dated
June 3, 2005 (Recommendation), that the Manufactured Housing Home
Procedural and Enforcement Regulations, 24 CFR part 3282, be amended by
revising Subpart I, Consumer Complaint Handling and Remedial Actions
(24 CFR 3282.401-3282.416) (Subpart I). The Recommendation is the
product of extensive work of the MHCC over a period of several months,
through 20 lengthy meetings that have involved producers and a retailer
of manufactured housing, consumers, administrators of State
manufactured housing programs, other interested parties, and HUD.
During those discussions, HUD advised the MHCC members, orally and in
writing, of concerns that HUD would have with certain language under
consideration by the MHCC and the reasons for those concerns. The MHCC
addressed some, but not all, of those concerns in its final
Recommendation.
Subsequent to the submission of the Recommendation, there have been
7 additional meetings of the MHCC and HUD to discuss the MHCC
Recommendation and revisions that HUD had suggested. Agreement was
reached on some further changes suggested by HUD or members of the MHCC
during those meetings, and those changes will be included in the
proposed rule that HUD expects to publish later. In the end the MHCC
declined, however, to revise its Recommendation in a manner that would
allow HUD to accept it, unchanged, for publication as a proposed rule.
While HUD agrees with a great majority of the MHCC Recommendation,
HUD continues to believe that some of the language in the
Recommendation is not consistent with the Act and that a few
modifications of the language are needed. Therefore, because HUD cannot
accept the entire Recommendation, HUD must reject the entire
Recommendation. HUD is following the procedure established in section
604(b)(4) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 5403(b)(4)), under which, upon
rejection, the Secretary must publish notice of the Recommendation in
the Federal Register, along with modifications that HUD would suggest.
The Secretary appreciates the dedication and care that the MHCC
members have shown in their consideration of the changes suggested for
subpart I, and expects to move forward under the separate procedure to
publish a proposed rule for public comment that embraces a great
majority of the revised subpart I language included in the
Recommendation. The proposed rule that HUD has presented
[[Page 34465]]
to the MHCC for its consideration under the procedures in section
604(b)(3) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 4503(b)(3)) uses the MHCC
Recommendation as its base, but also includes the modifications that
are discussed in this notice.
Areas To Be Modified
HUD is setting out in this section of the notice its reasons for
the rejection of the Recommendation and the modifications that HUD has
suggested to the MHCC.
Reasons for Rejection: Requirements Not Consistent With Statutory
Authority
(Sec. Sec. 3282.404(b)(3), 3282.405(a)(2), 3282.415(c), and
3282.415(d) in Recommendation). In section 615 of the Act (42 U.S.C.
5414), Congress placed responsibility for the notification and
correction of defects in manufactured homes on manufacturers, and set
guidelines for manufacturers to meet these responsibilities. Section
613 of the Act (42 U.S.C. 5412) imposes additional repair and
repurchase requirements on manufacturers. The MHCC has recommended some
revisions of the Subpart I requirements that are not consistent with
the responsibilities established by Congress when it granted preemption
for the Federal standards that apply to the construction of
manufactured homes.
The MHCC has recommended limiting the responsibility for furnishing
notification to homeowners about safety hazards and failures to comply
with the Federal standards, which Congress expressly placed on
manufacturers under section 615(a) of the Act (42 U.S.C. 5414(a)).
Under the MHCC Recommendation, in some of these instances consumers
would not receive notification of problems in their home. HUD would
modify the language in Sec. Sec. 3282.404(b)(3) and 3282.405(a)(2) of
the Recommendation to eliminate phrases that limit a manufacturer's
notification responsibilities to only those problems that are caused by
persons working on behalf of a manufacturer. Consistent with the Act
HUD would continue, however, to limit the manufacturer's correction
responsibilities to only those defects that are related to errors in
design or assembly of the home by the manufacturer, in accordance with
section 615(g) (42 U.S.C. 5414(g)).
HUD has a similar concern about language limiting the
manufacturer's responsibility under section 613 of the Act (42 U.S.C.
5412) for correcting noncompliances, defects, serious defects, and
imminent safety hazards in homes delivered to retailers and
distributors before those homes are sold to purchasers, and about
language establishing new responsibilities for retailers and
distributors that are not found in the Act. HUD would modify Sec.
3282.415(c) of the MHCC Recommendation by eliminating phrases that
would limit the manufacturers' pre-sale correction responsibilities and
could require HUD and State regulators to meet new burdens of proof in
assuring production of manufactured homes that comply with the Federal
construction and safety standards. HUD also would delete Sec.
3282.415(d) as being inconsistent with sections 613 and 623(c)(12) of
the Act (42 U.S.C. 5412 and 5422 (c)(12)).
Other suggested modifications: determination factors (Sec.
3282.404(c)(2)(iii)). In the proposed rule that HUD has submitted to
the MHCC for prepublication review, HUD also included a few other
modifications to the Recommendation, even though HUD does not base its
rejection of the MHCC Recommendation on these modifications.
HUD believes that it is important for manufacturers to use
appropriate methods for determining which manufactured homes should be
included in a class of homes for which notification or correction of
defects or safety hazards is required. Currently, Sec. 3282.409(c) of
HUD's regulations recognizes a methodology that includes inspection of
the actual homes, not the records of those homes. The MHCC
Recommendation would revise the current provision by permitting
inspection of the records, including consumer and retailer complaints,
rather than the homes. HUD would modify that permissive language to
make it clear that the methodology would only be acceptable if the
cause of the problem is such that it would be understood and reported
by consumers or retailers. For example, inadequate firestopping in a
home is not a condition that a homeowner, or even a retailer, can be
expected to observe and report. Therefore, a manufacturer who is
determining the scope of a class of homes with inadequate firestopping
should not be permitted to rely on complaint records alone to identify
the homes to be included in the class.
Other suggested modifications: recordkeeping. HUD would also add
language in the recordkeeping requirements in Sec. 3282.417 that would
provide options for how to comply with the requirements and would avoid
using an undefined term. These modifications would establish a brighter
line for how manufacturer records are to be maintained. The new
provisions would also recognize a manufacturer's right to keep some of
these records in a central class determination file that might be
preferred by some manufacturers and would reduce the amount of
paperwork required. HUD would add such an alternative because some
manufacturers are already keeping their records in this alternative
format, which is a format that also could be more user-friendly for HUD
and State regulators in enforcing the law.
Other suggested modifications: generally. HUD would reorganize
Sec. Sec. 3282.411 and 3282.412 of the MHCC Recommendation, to assure
these provisions are internally consistent. The general structure of
the MHCC Recommendation would be retained, however. Section 3282.411 of
the Recommendation establishes the prerequisites for any SAA to refer
information to the appropriate SAA or HUD for possible investigation.
Section 3282.412 sets forth requirements for HUD or an appropriate SAA
to initiate a formal administrative investigation process. The
revisions HUD would make in these sections of the Recommendation would
be technical changes to simplify and clarify the provisions and to
avoid overlap within the two sections.
HUD also would add a requirement in Sec. 3282.404(a) that, when a
manufacturer makes an initial determination of a serious defect or
imminent safety hazard, the manufacturer must notify HUD, the
appropriate SAA, and the manufacturer's IPIA of the determination. The
purpose of this requirement would be to provide advance notice of a
potentially serious problem during the time the manufacturer is
required to develop a full plan of notification and correction
regarding the problem. HUD would consider this modification to be
appropriate in light of the MHCC's Recommendation that would extend the
time a manufacturer has to complete its plan beyond what is permitted
under the existing regulations.
Finally, HUD included clarifying and nonsubstantive, editorial
changes in the modified version of the Recommendation that HUD
submitted to the MHCC for its prepublication review. These changes
would be minor and would be for the purpose of making the intent of the
applicable provision more clear.
Principles Guiding MHCC Subcommittee
The following principles were adopted by the MHCC subcommittee that
was charged with developing a draft revision of subpart I for full
committee consideration, and are
[[Page 34466]]
included in this notice to provide additional context for the MHCC's
efforts on this difficult undertaking:
(1) Subpart I regulations should clearly identify, especially to
the homeowner, what problems manufacturers will correct. At a minimum,
problems currently being corrected will continue to be corrected.
(2) Subpart I should hold the manufacturer accountable for all
construction to comply with the Federal manufactured home construction
and safety standards.
(3) If a person is contractually obligated to provide a service or
extend a warranty for work that is the manufacturer's responsibility,
subpart I regulations would not preclude fulfillment of that obligation
or warranty.
(4) Subpart I regulations should clearly define when a manufacturer
has a duty to investigate and how the investigation should be
performed.
(5) Subpart I should describe methods available to conduct an
investigation and indicate the investigation methods may vary based on
the circumstances surrounding the problem.
(6) Subpart I regulations should hold the manufacturer accountable
for choosing the most appropriate method of investigation based on the
known facts concerning the problem.
(7) Subpart I regulations should support the manufacturer's
findings and subsequent course of action when a manufacturer has
conducted in good faith an appropriate investigation based on the facts
available and taken appropriate action. If additional information is
presented, then a new investigation may be necessary. SAAs and HUD
oversight may be conducted as necessary.
(8) Subpart I regulations should require manufacturers to utilize
service records and approved designs as part of the investigative
process.
(9) Subpart I regulations should clearly identify who is
accountable for problems occurring to sections of homes that are in
transit, in storage or at retail sales centers.
(10) Subpart I regulations should not hold the manufacturer
responsible for normal wear and aging, unforeseeable consumer abuse or
neglect of proper maintenance. The regulations need to indicate how old
the manufactured home needs to be before these factors could be
considered the primary cause of the problem. The life of the product
warranty may be considered for time limits.
(11) The manufacturer's responsibility for construction should be
separate and distinct from any manufacturer responsibility for
installation.
(12) Subpart I regulations should utilize consistent wording and be
in conformance with the Act as amended by the MHIA 2000.
(13) Subpart I regulations should place a priority on correcting
the problem while maintaining requirements for sufficient documentation
to identify patterns in construction problems.
(14) HUD cannot exceed its statutory authority and must implement
all of the requirements of the Act.
(15) For each recommendation, the MHCC will consider the factors in
section 604(e) of the Act and any other statutory guidance.
(16) The recommendations for notification and correction should be
consistent with the requirements of sections 602 and 615 of the Act.
Text of MHCC Proposal
The text of the rejected proposal submitted by the MHCC is
published as Appendix A.
Dated: May 23, 2006.
Brian D. Montgomery,
Assistant Secretary for Housing-Federal Housing Commissioner.
Appendix A--Text of Rejected MHCC Recommendation to Amend Subpart I of
24 CFR Part 3282
Subpart A: Changes in Definitions:
Sec. 3282.7 (j): Text with proposed modification:
Defect means, for purposes of this part, a failure to comply
with an applicable Federal manufactured home safety and construction
standard including any defect in the performance, construction,
components or material that renders the manufactured home or any
part thereof not fit for the ordinary use for which it was intended,
but does not result in an unreasonable risk of injury or death to
occupants of the affected manufactured home.
Sec. 3282.7 (v): Text with proposed modification:
Manufactured Home Construction means all activities relating to
the assembly and manufacture of a manufactured home including, but
not limited to, those relating to durability, quality, and safety,
but does not include those activities regulated under the
installation standards in this chapter.
Sec. 3282.7 (dd) (NEW): Proposed New Text:
Manufactured Home installation standards means reasonable
specifications for the installation of a manufactured home, at the
place of occupancy, to ensure the proper siting, the joining of all
sections of the home, and the installation of stabilization, support
or anchoring systems.
Subpart H, Sec. 3282.362(c)(1):
Add the following new 11th sentence, before the sentence
``Failure to perform to the approved manual justifies withholding
labels until an adequate level of performance is attained.''
``The IPIA must periodically review the manufacturer's service
records for determinations under Sec. 3282.404 to see whether
evidence exists that the manufacturer is ignoring or not performing
under its approved quality assurance manual, and, if such evidence
is found, must advise the manufacturer so that appropriate action
may be taken under Sec. 3282.404.''
Subpart I
Table of Contents:
Sec. 3282.401 Purpose and scope
Sec. 3282.402 General provisions
Sec. 3282.403 Consumer complaint and information referral
Sec. 3282.404 Determinations and concurrences
Sec. 3282.405 Notification pursuant to manufacturer's determination
Sec. 3282.406 Required manufacturer correction
Sec. 3282.407 Voluntary compliance with the notification and
correction requirements under the Act
Sec. 3282.408 Plan of notification required
Sec. 3282.409 Contents of plan
Sec. 3282.410 Implementation of plan
Sec. 3282.411 Administrative initiation of remedial action
Sec. 3282.412 Preliminary and final administrative determinations
Sec. 3282.413 Implementation of Final Determination
Sec. 3282.414 Replacement or repurchase after sale to purchaser
Sec. 3282.415 Correction of homes before sale to purchaser
Sec. 3282.416 Oversight of notification and correction activities
Sec. 3282.417 Recordkeeping
Sec. 3282.418 Factors for appropriateness and amount of civil
penalties
Sec. 3282.401 Purpose and scope.
(a) Purpose. The purpose of this subpart is to establish a
system of protections provided by the Act with respect to imminent
safety hazards and violations of the construction and safety
standards with a minimum of formality and delay, while protecting
the rights of all parties.
(b) Scope. This subpart sets out the procedures to be followed
by manufacturers, retailers, State Administrative Agencies, primary
inspection agencies, and the Secretary to assure that notification
and correction are provided with respect to manufactured homes when
required under this subpart. Notification and correction may be
required with respect to manufactured homes that have been sold or
otherwise released by the manufacturer to another party.
Sec. 3282.402 General provisions.
(a) Purchaser's rights. Nothing in this subpart shall limit the
rights of the purchaser under any contract or applicable law.
(b) Manufacturer's liability limited. A manufacturer is not
responsible for failures that occur in any manufactured home or
component as the result of normal wear and
[[Page 34467]]
aging, unforeseeable consumer abuse, or unreasonable neglect of
maintenance. The life of a component warranty may be one of the
indicators used to establish normal wear and aging. A failure of any
component may not be attributed by the manufacturer to normal wear
and aging under this subpart during the term of any applicable
warranty provided by the original manufacturer of the affected
component.
Sec. 3282.403 Consumer complaint and information referral.
(a) Retailer responsibilities. When a retailer receives a
consumer complaint or other information about a home in its
possession, or that it has sold or leased, that likely indicates a
noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or imminent safety hazard,
the retailer must forward the complaint or information to the
manufacturer of the manufactured home in question as early as
possible in accordance with Sec. 3282.256.
(b) SAA and HUD responsibilities. (1) When an SAA or the
Secretary receives a consumer complaint or other information that
likely indicates a noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard in a manufactured home, the SAA or HUD must:
(i) Forward the complaint or information to the manufacturer of
the home in question as early as possible; and
(ii) Send a copy of the complaint or other information to the
SAA of the State where the manufactured home was manufactured or to
the Secretary if there is no such SAA.
(2) When it appears from the complaint or other information that
an imminent safety hazard or serious defect may be involved, the SAA
of the State where the home was manufactured must also send a copy
of the complaint or other information to the Secretary.
(c) Manufacturer responsibilities. Whenever the manufacturer
receives information from any source that the manufacturer believes
in good faith relates to a noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard in any of its manufactured homes, the
manufacturer must, for each such occurrence, make the determinations
required by Sec. 3282.404.
Sec. 3282.404 Manufacturers' determinations and related concurrences.
(a) Initial determination. (1) Not later than 30 days after a
manufacturer receives information that it believes in good faith
likely indicates a noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard, the manufacturer must make a specific
initial determination that there is a noncompliance, a defect, a
serious defect, an imminent safety hazard, or that the information
requires no further action under subpart I. When no further action
under subpart I is required and a problem still exists, the
manufacturer must forward the information in its possession to the
appropriate retailer and, if known, the installer, for their
consideration.
(2) In making the determination of noncompliance, defect,
serious defect, imminent safety hazard, or that no further action is
required under subpart I, the manufacturer must review the
information it received and carry out reasonable investigations,
including, if appropriate, inspections. The manufacturer must review
the information, the known facts, and the circumstances relating to
the complaint or information, including service records, approved
designs, and audit findings, as applicable, to decide what
investigations are reasonable.
(b) Class determination. (1) When the manufacturer makes an
initial determination of defect, serious defect, or imminent safety
hazard, the manufacturer must also make a good faith determination
of the class that includes each manufactured home in which the same
defect, serious defect, or imminent safety hazard exists or likely
exists. Multiple occurrences of defects may be considered the same
defect if they have the same cause, are related to a specific
workstation description, or are related to the same failure to
follow the manufacturer's approved quality assurance manual. Good
faith may be used as a defense to the imposition of a penalty, but
does not relieve the manufacturer of its responsibilities for
notification or correction under this subpart I. The manufacturer
must make this class determination not later than 20 days after
making a determination of defect, serious defect, or imminent safety
hazard.
(2) Paragraph (c) of this section sets out methods for a
manufacturer to use in determining the class of manufactured homes.
If the manufacturer can identify the precise manufactured homes
affected by the defect, serious defect, or imminent safety hazard,
the class of manufactured homes may include only those manufactured
homes actually affected by the same defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard. The manufacturer is also permitted to
exclude from the class those manufactured homes for which the
manufacturer has information that indicates the homes were not
affected by the same cause. If it is not possible to identify the
precise manufactured homes affected, the class must include every
manufactured home in the group of homes that is identifiable because
the same defect, serious defect, or imminent safety hazard exists or
likely exists in some homes in that group of manufactured homes.
(3) For purposes related to this section, a defect, a serious
defect, or an imminent safety hazard likely exists in a manufactured
home if the cause of the defect, serious defect, or imminent safety
hazard is such that the same defect, serious defect, or imminent
safety hazard would likely have been introduced systematically into
more than one manufactured home by the manufacturer, including a
person performing work or providing a component on behalf of the
manufacturer. Indications that the defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard would likely have been introduced
systematically may include, but are not limited to, complaints that
can be traced to the same faulty design, problems known to exist in
supplies of components or parts, information related to the
performance of a particular employee or use of a particular process,
and information signaling a failure to follow quality control
procedures with respect to a particular aspect of the manufactured
home.
(4) If under this paragraph (b) the manufacturer must determine
the class of homes, the manufacturer must obtain from the IPIA, and
the IPIA must provide, either:
(i) The IPIA's written concurrence on the methods used by the
manufacturer to identify the homes that should be included in the
class of homes; or
(ii) The IPIA's written statement explaining why it believes the
manufacturer's methods for determining the class of homes were
inappropriate or inadequate.
(c) Methods for determining class. (1) In making a class
determination under paragraph (b) of this section, a manufacturer is
responsible for carrying out reasonable investigations. In carrying
out reasonable investigations, the manufacturer must review the
information, the known facts, and the relevant circumstances, and
generally must establish the cause of the defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard. Based on the results of such investigations
and all information received, the manufacturer must use an
appropriate method or appropriate methods to determine the class of
manufactured homes in which the same defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard exists or likely exists.
(2) Methods that may be used in determining the class of
manufactured homes include, but are not limited to:
(i) Inspection of the manufactured home in question, including
its design, to determine whether the defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard resulted from the design itself;
(ii) Physical inspection of manufactured homes of the same
design or construction, as appropriate, that were produced before
and after a home in question;
(iii) Inspection of the service records of a home in question
and of homes of the same design or construction, as appropriate,
produced before and after that home;
(iv) Inspection of manufacturer quality control records to
determine whether quality control procedures were followed and, if
not, the time period during which they were not;
(v) Inspection of IPIA records to determine whether the defect,
serious defect, or imminent safety hazard was either detected or
specifically found not to exist in some manufactured homes;
(vi) Identification of the cause as relating to a particular
employee whose work, or to a process whose use, would have been
common to the production of the manufacturer's homes for a period of
time; and
(vii) Inspection of records relating to components supplied by
other parties and known to contain or suspected of containing a
defect, a serious defect, or an imminent safety hazard.
(3) When the Secretary or an SAA decides the method chosen by
the manufacturer to conduct an investigation in order to make a
class determination is not the most appropriate method, the
Secretary or SAA must explain in writing to the manufacturer why the
chosen method is not the most appropriate.
(d) Documentation required. The manufacturer must comply with
the recordkeeping requirements in Sec. 3282.417 as
[[Page 34468]]
applicable to its determinations and any IPIA concurrence or
statement that it does not concur.
Sec. 3282.405 Notification pursuant to manufacturer's determination.
(a) General requirement. Every manufacturer of manufactured
homes must provide notification as set out in this section with
respect to any manufactured home produced by the manufacturer in
which the manufacturer determines, in good faith, that there exists
or likely exists:
(1) A serious defect or an imminent safety hazard; or
(2) The same defect caused by a manufacturer, including a person
performing work or providing a component on behalf of the
manufacturer, that has been introduced systematically into more than
one home.
(b) Requirements by category. (1) Noncompliance. A manufacturer
must provide notification of a noncompliance only when ordered to do
so by the Secretary or an SAA pursuant to Sec. Sec. 3282.412 and
3282.413.
(2) Defects. When a manufacturer has made a determination in
accordance with Sec. 3282.404 that a defect exists or likely exists
in more than one home, the manufacturer must prepare a plan for
notification in accordance with Sec. 3282.408, and must provide
notification with respect to each manufactured home in the class of
manufactured homes.
(3) Serious defects and imminent safety hazards. When a
manufacturer has made a determination in accordance with Sec.
3282.404 that a serious defect or imminent safety hazard exists or
likely exists, the manufacturer must prepare a plan for notification
in accordance with Sec. 3282.408, must provide notification with
respect to all manufactured homes in which the serious defect or
imminent safety hazard exists or likely exists, and must correct the
home or homes in accordance with Sec. 3282.406.
(c) Plan for notification required. (1) If a manufacturer
determines that it is responsible for providing notification under
this section, the manufacturer must prepare and receive approval on
a plan for notification as set out in Sec. 3282.408, unless the
manufacturer meets alternative requirements established in Sec.
3282.407.
(2) If the Secretary or SAA orders a manufacturer to provide
notification in accordance with the procedures in Sec. Sec.
3282.412 and 3282.413, the Secretary or SAA has the option of
requiring a manufacturer to prepare and receive approval on a plan
for notification.
(d) Method of notification. When a manufacturer provides
notification as required under this section, notification must be:
(1) By certified mail or other more expeditious means to each
retailer or distributor to whom any manufactured home in the class
of homes containing the defect, serious defect, or imminent safety
hazard was delivered;
(2) By certified or express mail to the first purchaser of each
manufactured home in the class of manufactured homes containing the
defect, serious defect, or imminent safety hazard, and, to the
extent feasible, to any subsequent owner to whom any warranty
provided by the manufacturer or required by Federal, State, or local
law on such manufactured home has been transferred, except that
notification need not be sent to any person known by the
manufacturer not to own the manufactured home in question if the
manufacturer has a record of a subsequent owner of the manufactured
home; and
(3) By certified or express mail to each other person who is a
registered owner of a manufactured home in the class of homes
containing the defect, serious defect, or imminent safety hazard and
whose name has been ascertained pursuant to Sec. 3282.211 or is
known to the manufacturer.
Sec. 3282.406 Required manufacturer correction.
(a) Correction of noncompliances and defects. (1) Section
3282.415 sets out requirements with respect to a manufacturer's
correction of any noncompliance or defect that exists in each
manufactured home that has been sold or otherwise released to a
retailer but that has not yet been sold to a purchaser.
(2) In accordance with section 623 of the Act and the
regulations in part 3288 of this chapter, the manufacturer,
retailer, or installer of a manufactured home must correct, at its
expense, each failure in the performance, construction, components,
or material of the home that renders the home or any part of the
home not fit for the ordinary use for which it was intended and that
is reported during the 1-year period beginning on the date of
installation of the home.
(b) Correction of serious defects and imminent safety hazards.
(1) A manufacturer required to furnish notification under Sec.
3282.405 or Sec. 3282.413 must correct, at its expense, any serious
defect or imminent safety hazard that can be related to an error in
design or assembly of the manufactured home by the manufacturer,
including an error in design or assembly of any component or system
incorporated into the manufactured home by the manufacturer.
(2) If while making corrections under any of the provisions of
this subpart, the manufacturer creates an imminent safety hazard or
serious defect, the manufacturer shall correct the imminent safety
hazard or serious defect.
(3) Each serious defect or imminent safety hazard corrected
under this paragraph must be brought into compliance with applicable
Standards or, where the Standards are not specific, with the
manufacturer's approved design.
(c) Inclusion in plan. (1) In the plan required by Sec.
3282.408, the manufacturer must provide for correction of those
homes that are required to be corrected pursuant to paragraph (b) of
this section.
(2) If the Secretary or SAA orders a manufacturer to provide
correction in accordance with the procedures in Sec. 3282.413, the
Secretary or SAA has the option of requiring a manufacturer to
prepare and receive approval on a plan for correction.
(d) Corrections by owners. A manufacturer that is required to
make corrections under paragraph (b) of this section or that elects
to make corrections in accordance with Sec. 3282.407 must reimburse
any owner of an affected manufactured home who chose to make the
correction before the manufacturer did so for the reasonable cost of
correction.
(e) Correction of appliances, components, or systems. (1) If any
appliance, component, or system in a manufactured home is covered by
a product warranty, the manufacturer, retailer, or installer that is
responsible under this section for correcting a noncompliance, a
defect, a serious defect, or an imminent safety hazard in the
appliance, component, or system may seek the required correction
directly from the producer. The SAA that approves any plan of
notification required pursuant to Sec. 3282.408 or the Secretary,
as applicable, may establish reasonable time limits for the
manufacturer of the home and the producer of the appliance,
component, or system to agree on who is to make the correction and
for completing the correction.
(2) Nothing in this section shall prevent the manufacturer,
retailer, or installer from seeking indemnification from the
producer of the appliance, component, or system for correction work
done on any appliance, component, or system.
Sec. 3282.407 Voluntary compliance with the notification and
correction requirements under the Act.
A manufacturer that takes corrective action that complies with
one of the following three alternatives to the requirement in Sec.
3282.408 for preparing a plan will be deemed to have provided any
notification required by Sec. 3282.405:
(a) Voluntary action--one home. When a manufacturer has made a
determination that only one manufactured home is involved, the
manufacturer is not required to provide notification pursuant to
Sec. 3282.405 or to prepare or submit a plan if:
(1) The manufacturer has made a determination of defect; or
(2) The manufacturer has made a determination of serious defect
or imminent safety hazard and corrects the home within the 20-day
period. The manufacturer must maintain, in the plant where the
manufactured home was manufactured, a complete record of the
correction. The record must describe briefly the facts of the case
and any known cause of the serious defect or imminent safety hazard
and state what corrective actions were taken, and it must be
maintained in the service records in a form that will allow the
Secretary or an SAA to review all such corrections.
(b) Voluntary action--multiple homes. Regardless of whether a
plan has been submitted under Sec. 3282.408, the manufacturer may
act prior to obtaining approval of the plan. Such action is subject
to review and disapproval by the SAA of the State where the home was
manufactured or the Secretary, unless the manufacturer obtains the
written agreement of the SAA or the Secretary that the corrective
action is adequate. If such an agreement is obtained, the correction
must be accepted as adequate by all SAA's and the Secretary if the
manufacturer makes the correction as agreed to and any imminent
safety hazard or serious defect is eliminated.
[[Page 34469]]
(c) Waiver. (1) A manufacturer may obtain a waiver of the
notification requirements in Sec. 3282.405 and the plan
requirements in Sec. 3282.408 either from the SAA of the State of
manufacture, when all of the manufactured homes that would be
covered by the plan were manufactured in that State, or from the
Secretary. As of the date of a request for a waiver, the
notification and plan requirements are deferred pending timely
submission of any additional documentation as the SAA or the
Secretary may require and final resolution of the waiver request. If
a waiver request is not granted, the plan required by Sec. 3282.408
must be submitted within 5 days after the expiration of the time
period established in Sec. 3282.408 if the manufacturer is notified
that the request was not granted.
(2) The waiver may be approved if not later than 20 days after
making the determination that notification is required, the
manufacturer presents evidence that it in good faith believes would
show to the satisfaction of the SAA or the Secretary that:
(i) The manufacturer has identified all homes that would be
covered by the plan in accordance with Sec. 3282.408;
(ii) The manufacturer will correct, at its expense, all of the
identified homes, either within 60 days of being informed that the
request for waiver has been granted or within another time limit
approved in the waiver; and
(iii) The proposed repairs are adequate to remove the defect,
serious defect, or imminent safety hazard that gave rise to the
determination that correction is required; and
(3) The manufacturer must correct all affected manufactured
homes within 60 days of being informed that the request for waiver
has been granted or the time limit approved in the waiver, as
applicable. The manufacturer must record the known cause of the
problem and the correction in the service records in an approved
form that will allow the Secretary or SAA to review the cause and
correction.
Sec. 3282.408 Plan of notification required.
(a) Manufacturer's plan required. Except as provided in Sec.
3282.407, if a manufacturer determines that it is responsible for
providing notification under Sec. 3282.405, the manufacturer must
prepare a plan in accordance with this section and Sec. 3282.409.
The manufacturer must, as soon as practical, but not later than 20
days after making the determination of defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard, submit the plan for approval to one of the
following, as appropriate:
(1) The SAA of the State of manufacture, when all of the
manufactured homes covered by the plan were manufactured in that
State; or
(2) The Secretary, when the manufactured homes were manufactured
in more than one State or there is no SAA in the State of
manufacture.
(b) Implementation of plan. Upon approval of the plan, including
any changes for cause required by the Secretary or SAA after
consultation with the manufacturer, the manufacturer must carry out
the approved plan within the agreed time limits.
Sec. 3282.409 Contents of plan.
(a) Purpose of plan. This section sets out the requirements that
must be met by a manufacturer in preparing any plan it is required
to submit under Sec. 3282.408. The underlying requirement is that
the plan shows how the manufacturer will fulfill its
responsibilities with respect to notification and correction.
(b) Contents of plan. The plan must:
(1) Identify, by serial number and other appropriate identifying
criteria, all manufactured homes for which notification is to be
provided, as determined pursuant to Sec. 3282.404;
(2) Include a copy of the notice that the manufacturer proposes
to use to provide the notification required by Sec. 3282.405;
(3) Provide for correction of those manufactured homes that are
required to be corrected pursuant to Sec. 3282.406(b);
(4) Include the IPIA's written concurrence or statement on the
methods used by the manufacturer to identify the homes that should
be included in the class of homes, as required pursuant to Sec.
3282.404(b); and
(5) Include a deadline for completion of all notifications and
corrections.
(c) Contents of notice. Except as otherwise agreed by the
Secretary or the SAA reviewing the plan under Sec. 3282.408, the
notice to be approved as part of the plan must include the
following:
(1) An opening statement that reads: ``This notice is sent to
you in accordance with the requirements of the National Manufactured
Housing Construction and Safety Standards Act.'';
(2) The following statement: ``[choose one, as appropriate:
Manufacturer's name, or the Secretary, or the (insert State) SAA]
has determined that [insert identifying criteria of manufactured
home] may not comply with an applicable Federal Manufactured Home
Construction or Safety Standard.''
(3) Except when the manufacturer is providing notice pursuant to
an approved plan or agreement with the Secretary or an SAA under
Sec. 3282.408, each applicable statement as follows:
(i) ``An imminent safety hazard may exist in (identifying
criteria of manufactured home).''
(ii) ``A serious defect may exist in (identifying criteria of
manufactured home).''
(iii) ``A defect may exist in (identifying criteria of
manufactured home).''
(4) A clear description of the defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard and an explanation of the risk to the
occupants, which must include:
(i) The location of the defect, serious defect, or imminent
safety hazard in the manufactured home;
(ii) A description of any hazards, malfunctions, deterioration,
or other consequences that may reasonably be expected to result from
the defect, serious defect, or imminent safety hazard;
(iii) A statement of the conditions that may cause such
consequences to arise; and
(iv) Precautions, if any, that the owner can, should, or must
take to reduce the chance that the consequences will arise before
the manufactured home is repaired;
(5) A statement of whether there will be any warning that a
dangerous occurrence may take place and what that warning would be,
and any signs that the owner might see, hear, smell, or feel which
might indicate danger or deterioration of the manufactured home as a
result of the defect, serious defect, or imminent safety hazard;
(6) A statement that the manufacturer will correct the
manufactured home, if the manufacturer will correct the manufactured
home under this subpart or otherwise;
(7) A statement in accordance with whichever of the following is
appropriate:
(i) Where the manufacturer will correct the manufactured home at
no cost to the owner, the statement must indicate how and when the
correction will be done, how long the correction will take, and any
other information that may be helpful to the owner; or
(ii) When the manufacturer does not bear the cost of repair, the
notification must include a detailed description of all parts and
materials needed to make the correction, a description of all steps
to be followed in making the correction including appropriate
illustrations, and an estimate of the cost of the purchaser or owner
of the correction;
(8) A statement informing the owner that the owner may submit a
complaint to the SAA or Secretary if the owner believes that:
(i) The notification or the remedy described therein is
inadequate;
(ii) The manufacturer has failed or is unable to remedy the
problem in accordance with its notification; or
(iii) The manufacturer has failed or is unable to remedy within
a reasonable time after the owner's first attempt to obtain remedy;
and
(9) A statement that any actions taken by the manufacturer under
the Act in no way limit the rights of the owner or any other person
under any contract or other applicable law and that the owner may
have further rights under contract or other applicable law.
Sec. 3282.410 Implementation of plan.
(a) Deadline for notifications. (1) The manufacturer must
complete the notifications carried out under a plan approved by an
SAA or the Secretary under Sec. 3282.408 on or before the deadline
approved by the SAA or Secretary. In approving each deadline, an SAA
or the Secretary will allow a reasonable time to complete all
notifications, taking into account the number of manufactured homes
involved and the difficulty of completing the notifications.
(2) The manufacturer must, at the time of dispatch, furnish to
the SAA or the Secretary a true or representative copy of each
notice, bulletin, and other written communication sent to retailers,
distributors, or owners of manufactured homes regarding any serious
defect or imminent safety hazard that may exist in any homes
produced by the manufacturer, or regarding any noncompliance or
defect for which the SAA or Secretary requires, under Sec.
3282.413(c), the manufacturer to submit a plan for providing
notification.
(b) Deadline for corrections. A manufacturer that is required to
correct a serious defect or imminent safety hazard pursuant to Sec.
3282.406(b) must complete implementation of the plan required by
[[Page 34470]]
Sec. 3282.408 on or before the deadline approved by the SAA or the
Secretary. The deadline must be no later than 60 days after approval
of the plan. In approving the deadline, the SAA or the Secretary
will allow a reasonable amount of time to complete the plan, taking
into account the seriousness of the problem, the number of
manufactured homes involved, the immediacy of any risk, and the
difficulty of completing the action. The seriousness and immediacy
of any risk posed by the serious defect or imminent safety hazard
will be given greater weight than other considerations.
(c) Extensions. An SAA that approved a plan or the Secretary may
grant an extension of the deadlines included in a plan if the
manufacturer requests such an extension in writing and shows good
cause for the extension, and the SAA or the Secretary decides that
the extension is justified and is not contrary to the public
interest. When the Secretary grants an extension for completion of
any corrections, the Secretary will notify the manufacturer and must
publish notice of such extension in the Federal Register. When an
SAA grants an extension for completion of any corrections, the SAA
must notify the Secretary and the manufacturer.
(d) Recordkeeping. The manufacturer must provide the report and
maintain the records that are required by Sec. 3282.417 for all
notification and correction actions.
Sec. 3282.411 Administrative initiation of remedial action.
(a) Administrative review of information. Whenever the Secretary
or an SAA has information indicating the possible existence of a
noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or imminent safety hazard in
a manufactured home, the Secretary or SAA may initiate
administrative review of the need for notification and correction in
accordance with paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.
(b) SAA authority. (1) An SAA that decides to initiate such
administrative review must refer the matter to the SAA in the state
of manufacture or, whenever the affected manufactured homes were
manufactured in more than one state, to the Secretary for possible
action pursuant to Sec. 3282.412.
(2) An SAA in a State of manufacture is permitted to issue a
preliminary determination in accordance with Sec. 3282.412 under
the following circumstances:
(i) The SAA believes that a manufactured home that has been sold
or otherwise released by a manufacturer to a retailer or
distributor, but for which there is no completed sale to a
purchaser, contains a noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or
imminent safety hazard;
(ii) The SAA believes that the information referenced in
paragraph (a) of this section indicates a class of homes in which a
noncompliance or defect possibly exists;
(iii) The SAA believes that the information referenced in
paragraph (a) of this section indicates one or more homes in which a
serious defect or an imminent safety hazard possibly exists;
(iv) The SAA is reviewing a plan under Sec. 3282.408 and the
SAA and manufacturer disagree on proposed changes to the plan;
(v) The SAA believes that the manufacturer has failed to fulfill
the requirements of a waiver granted under Sec. 3282.407; or
(vi) There is evidence that a manufacturer in the State failed
to make the determinations required under Sec. 3282.404.
(3) For purposes of this paragraph (b), the conclusion that
there is a class of homes in which a noncompliance or defect
possibly exists must be based on the same factors that are
established for a manufacturer's class determination in Sec.
3282.404(b). If evidence arises that the manufactured homes in the
class were manufactured in more than one state, the SAA must refer
the matter to the Secretary for any further action.
(4) An SAA that issues a preliminary determination must provide
a copy of the preliminary determination to the Secretary at the time
of its issuance. Failure to comply with this requirement does not
affect the validity of the preliminary determination.
(c) Secretary authority. The Secretary may make a preliminary
determination in accordance with Sec. 3282.412 when:
(1) There is evidence that a noncompliance, defect, serious
defect, or imminent safety hazard possibly exists in any
manufactured home; or
(2) There is evidence that the manufacturer failed to make the
determinations required under Sec. 3282.404.
(d) Secretary notification. The Secretary will notify the SAA of
each State where the affected homes were manufactured and, to the
extent it is reasonable, the SAA of each State where the homes are
located of the issuance of a preliminary determination. Failure to
comply with this requirement does not affect the validity of the
preliminary determination.
Sec. 3282.412 Preliminary and final administrative determinations.
(a) Issuance of preliminary determination. In accordance with
Sec. 3282.411, the Secretary or an SAA may issue a Notice of
Preliminary Determination when:
(1) The manufacturer has not provided to the Secretary or SAA
the necessary information to make a determination that:
(i) A noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or imminent safety
hazard possibly exists; or
(ii) A manufacturer had information that likely indicates a
noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or imminent safety hazard for
which the manufacturer failed to make the determinations required
under Sec. 3282.404; or
(2) The Secretary or SAA has information that likely indicates a
noncompliance, a defect, a serious defect, or an imminent safety
hazard exists.
(b) Notice of Preliminary Determination. (1) The Notice of
Preliminary Determination must be sent by certified mail or express
delivery and must:
(i) Include the factual basis for the determination;
(ii) Include the criteria used to identify any class of homes in
which the noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or imminent safety
hazard possibly exists;
(iii) If applicable, indicate that the manufacturer may be
required to make corrections on a home or in a class of homes; and
(iv) If the preliminary determination is that the manufacturer
failed to make an initial determination required under Sec.
3282.404(a), include an allegation that the manufacturer failed to
act in good faith.
(2) The Notice of Preliminary Determination must inform the
manufacturer that the preliminary determination will become final
unless the manufacturer requests a hearing or presentation of views
under subpart D of this part.
(c) Presentation of views. (1) The Secretary or the SAA, as
applicable, must receive the manufacturer's request for a hearing or
presentation of views:
(i) Within 15 days of delivery of the Notice of Preliminary
Determination of serious defect, defect, or noncompliance; or
(ii) Within 5 days of delivery of the Notice of Preliminary
Determination of imminent safety hazard.
(2) A Formal or an Informal Presentation of Views will be held
in accordance with Sec. 3282.152 promptly upon receipt of a
manufacturer's request under paragraph (c) of this section.
(d) Issuance of Final Determination. (1) The SAA or the
Secretary, as appropriate, may make a Final Determination that an
imminent safety hazard, serious defect, defect, or noncompliance
exists, or that the manufacturer failed to make the determinations
required under Sec. 3282.404, if:
(i) The manufacturer fails to respond to the Notice of
Preliminary Determination within the time period established in
paragraph (c)(2) of this section; or
(ii) The SAA or the Secretary decides that the views and
evidence presented by the manufacturer or others are insufficient to
rebut the preliminary determination.
(2) At the time that the SAA or Secretary makes a Final
Determination that an imminent safety hazard, serious defect,
defect, or noncompliance exists, the SAA or Secretary, as
appropriate, must issue an order in accordance with Sec. 3282.413.
Sec. 3282.413 Implementation of Final Determination.
(a) Issuance of orders. (1) The SAA or the Secretary, as
appropriate, must issue an order directing the manufacturer to
furnish notification if:
(i) The SAA makes a Final Determination that a defect or
noncompliance exists in a class of homes;
(ii) The Secretary makes a Final Determination that an imminent
safety hazard, serious defect, defect, or noncompliance exists; or
(iii) The SAA makes a Final Determination that an imminent
safety hazard or serious defect exists in any home and the SAA has
received the Secretary's concurrence on the issuance of the Final
Determination and order.
(2) The SAA or the Secretary, as appropriate, must issue an
order directing the manufacturer to make corrections in any affected
manufactured home if:
(i) The SAA or the Secretary makes a Final Determination that a
defect or noncompliance exists in a manufactured home that has been
sold or otherwise released by a manufacturer to a retailer or
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distributor but for which the sale to a purchaser has not been
completed;
(ii) The Secretary makes a Final Determination that an imminent
safety hazard or serious defect exists; or
(iii) The SAA makes a Final Determination that an imminent
safety hazard or serious defect exists in any home and the SAA has
received the Secretary's concurrence on the issuance of the Final
Determination and order.
(3) Only the Secretary may issue an order directing a
manufacturer to repurchase or replace any manufactured home already
sold to a purchaser, unless the Secretary authorizes an SAA to issue
such an order.
(4) An SAA that has a concurrence or authorization from the
Secretary on any order issued under this section must have the
Secretary's concurrence on any subsequent changes to the order. An
SAA that has issued a Preliminary Determination must have the
Secretary's concurrence on any waiver of notification or any
settlement when the concerns addressed in the Preliminary
Determination involve a serious defect or an imminent safety hazard.
(5) If an SAA or the Secretary makes a Final Determination that
the manufacturer failed to make in good faith an initial
determination required under Sec. 3282.404(a):
(i) The SAA may impose any penalties or take any action
applicable under State law and may refer the matter to the Secretary
for appropriate action; and
(ii) The Secretary may take any action permitted by law.
(b) Decision to order replacement or repurchase. The SAA or the
Secretary will order correction of any manufactured home covered by
an order issued in accordance with paragraph (a) of this section
unless any requirements and factors applicable under Sec. 3282.414
and Sec. 3282.415 indicate that the SAA or the Secretary should
order replacement or repurchase of the home.
(c) Time for compliance with order. (1) The SAA or the Secretary
may require the manufacturer to submit a plan for providing any
notification and any correction, replacement, or repurchase remedy
that results from an order under this section. The manufacturer's
plan must include the method and date by which notification and any
corrective action will be provided.
(2) The manufacturer must provide any such notification and
correction, replacement, or repurchase remedy as early as
practicable, but not later than:
(i) Thirty (30) days, in the case of a Final Determination of
imminent safety hazard or when the SAA or Secretary has ordered
replacement or repurchase of a home pursuant to Sec. 3282.414; or
(ii) Sixty (60) days, in the case of a Final Determination of
serious defect, defect, or noncompliance.
(3) Subject to the requirements of paragraph (a)(3) of this
section, the SAA that issued the order or the Secretary may grant an
extension of the deadline for compliance with an order if:
(i) The manufacturer requests such an extension in writing and
shows good cause for the extension; and
(ii) The SAA or the Secretary is satisfied that the extension is
justified in the public interest.
(4) When the SAA grants an extension, it must notify the
manufacturer and forward to the Secretary a draft of a notice of the
extension for the Secretary to publish in the Federal Register. When
the Secretary grants an extension, the Secretary must notify the
manufacturer and publish notice of such extension in the Federal
Register.
(d) Appeal of SAA determination. Within 10 days of a
manufacturer receiving notice that an SAA has made a Final
Determination that an imminent safety hazard, serious defect,
defect, or noncompliance exists or that the manufacturer failed to
make the determinations required under Sec. 3282.404, the
manufacturer may appeal the Final Determination to the Secretary
under Sec. 3282.309.
(e) Settlement offers. A manufacturer may propose in writing, at
any time, an offer of settlement which shall be submitted to and
considered by the Secretary or the SAA that issued the Notice of
Preliminary Determination. The Secretary or the SAA has the option
of providing the manufacturer making the offer with an opportunity
to make an oral presentation in support of such offer. If the
manufacturer is notified that an offer of settlement is rejected,
the offer is deemed to have been withdrawn and will not constitute a
part of the record in the proceeding. Final acceptance by the
Secretary or an SAA of any offer of settlement automatically
terminates any proceedings related to the matter involved in the
settlement.
(f) Waiver of notification. (1) At any time after the Secretary
or an SAA has issued a Notice of Preliminary Determination, the
manufacturer may request the Secretary or SAA to waive any formal
notification requirements. When requesting a waiver, the
manufacturer must certify that:
(i) The manufacturer has made a class determination in
accordance with Sec. 3282.404(b);
(ii) The manufacturer will correct, at the manufacturer's
expense, all affected manufactured homes in the class within a time
period that is specified by the Secretary or SAA, but is not later
than 60 days after the manufacturer is notified of the acceptance of
the request for waiver or the issuance of any Final Determination,
whichever is later; and
(iii) The proposed repairs are adequate to correct the
noncompliance, defect, serious defect, or imminent safety hazard
that gave rise to the issuance of the Notice of Preliminary
Determination.
(2) If the Secretary or SAA grant a waiver, the manufacturer
must reimburse any owner of an affected manufactured home who chose
to make the correction before the manufacturer did so for the
reasonable cost of correction.
(g) Recordkeeping. The manufacturer must provide the report and
maintain the records that are required by Sec. 3282.417 for all
notification and correction actions.
Sec. 3282.414 Replacement or repurchase of homes after sa