Summary
of Rule Changes Effective July 1
Following
is a summary of Real Estate Commission rule changes which become effective July
1, 2009.
General Brokerage
•
Require provisional brokers to have the consent of their broker-in-charge in
order to advertise any real estate brokerage service, and to include in any
advertisement the name of the broker-in-charge or firm with which they are
associated.
• Revise
the requirements for being reinstated as a broker-in-charge after losing
broker-in-charge eligibility.
• Remove
the requirement that loan commitment dates be shown in offer to purchase and
sales contracts.
Examinations
•
Authorize the Commission to discipline brokers who cheated on or misused the
licensing examination where the cheating or misuse did not come to the
attention of the Commission until after the person was licensed.
Licensing
•
Eliminate language in connection with firm activation referring to a “form
provided by the Commission” when the Commission does not provide or require
such a form.
•
Address the requirements for reinstating licenses “cancelled” when provisional
brokers fail to complete their postlicensing
education.
•
Clarify that the license issuance date will not be changed for licenses
reinstated within six months following their expiration.
•
Provide that a broker whose license has been suspended by the Commission shall
have sixty days from the end of the period of license suspension to pay any
license fees that may have accrued during the period of suspension, and that
failure to pay within that period will result in loss of licensure.
•
Require brokers and license applicants to report to the Commission any “notarial commission sanctions” they have received.
Postlicensing Education
• Permit the Commission to deny or withdraw postlicensing course credit to any broker who attends more than twenty-one classroom hours of postlicensing instruction in any given seven-day period.