... heavy-handed regulation will only delay the time it takes to sell a home & increase the cost of doing so."
By Krystle Russin Heartland Institute

Under a new city law residents of Austin Texas must purchase costly energy audits before they will be allowed to sell their homes. Prospective sellers must provide evidence theyve had a professional analysis of items such as heating systems cooling systems draftiness and insulation. Austin joins San Francisco and Berkeley California as the only cities in the nation requiring such energy audits which typically cost $200 to $300 apiece. The requirement is an additional burden on homeowners already finding it difficult to sell their residences in a depressed housing market.
Shooting Homeowners in the Foot
It may not seem like much but in a tough economy I think the city council is shooting homeowners in the foot. Its going to make it more costly and difficult to sell a home" said Sterling Burnett a senior fellow at theDallas-

based
National Center for Policy Analysis.
Homes will be rated on something that may or may not be important to people but theyll have to figure it in. People will say the homes not very energy efficient. Based on these standards it could cost sales and its just laying an additional cost on sellers and buyers" Burnett added.
Alan Steinberg the 2008 Republican candidate for Congress in Texass 22nd district agreed.
This government intervention into private markets is an uncalled for and unnecessary action that will only harm individuals in an already depressed market while benefiting special interests" Steinberg said.
Audits Already Available
Consumer protection would be better met though requiring home inspections that could result in the identification of structural flaws than energy audits that are generally conducted by individuals interested in selling products to homeowners" said Steinberg.
I support efforts to increase energy efficiency but requiring energy audits does not lead to solutions but rather problems for people already suffering during tough economic times."
If prospective buyers desire an energy-efficiency assessment they have the freedom to search for such information on their own dime; whereas home sellers have no choice but to comply or else they are potentially subject to criminal prosecution" noted environmental policy analyst Drew Thornley.
This heavy-handed regulation will only delay the time it takes to sell a home and increase the cost of doing so."