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December 2016

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DECEMBER 2016 25 THE JOURNAL DON'T WASTE YOUR SKIRTING! Are you losing money because of short, thin panels? 12' panels reduce waste and save money! HOW WELL DO YOU KNOW YOUR SKIRTING? Required Panels Comparison EVERLOCK SHORTER TOTAL SCRAP % SAVINGS TOTAL LINEAR FEET 12' PANELS 11' 8" PANELS USING USING EVERLOCK @ 36" SET HEIGHT REQUIRED REQUIRED 11' 8" PANELS 12' PANELS 136' 26 34 90 FT. 30% SAVINGS! 160' 30 40 106 FT. 33% SAVINGS! 172' 33 43 114 FT. 30% SAVINGS! 186' 35 46 122 FT. 31% SAVINGS! WHITE GREY BEIGE TAN SAND CLAY • 12' PANELS • PREMIUM - NOT THIN • FACTORY DIRECT • SUPERIOR BLOW OUT PROTECTION • LIFETIME WARRANTY PLEASE CALL 1-800-843-3336 TO SAVE MONEY NOW! 6676 GunPark Drive, Suite F • Boulder, CO 80301 (303) 530-1566 • (800) 843-3336 • Fax (303) 530-3820 www.EVERLOCK.com EASY TO USE • NO MESS • PERMANENT • High-tech, super-aggressive adhesive • User-friendly product with easy-to-remove liner • Permanent and easy way to mend holes, cuts, and tears • Manufactured Home/RV repairs, vapor barriers, tarp repairs, etc. PREMIUM BOTTOMBOARD TAPES SIZES PART NO. 2" - 18" ROLLS 2" X 180' FM-200T 2" X 108' FM-2108T *4" X 180' *FM-400T 4" X 108' FM-4108T *6" X 180' *FM-600T 6" X 108' FM-6108T 8" X 180' FM-800T 18" X 180' FM-1800 28" ROLLS *28" X 25' *FM-2825 28" X 50' FM-2850 28" X 100' FM-2800 ALSO AVAILABLE! DO-IT-YOURSELF KITS FM-2845 ZIPPERED ACCESS 18" X 18" TRAP-FLAP FM-1818 4" X 72" ZIP-STRIP FM-0472 6" X 72" ZIP-STRIP FM-0672 CUSTOM SIZES AVAILABLE! *DENOTES MOST POPULAR SIZES Look for the logo on the core of every roll of tape! THANK YOU FOR STICKING WITH FLEX-MEND! Visit FLEXMEND.COM for your nearest distributor, or for distribution opportunities, please call: 1.800.462.1775 F F According to the Manufactured Housing As- sociation for Regulatory Reform (MHARR) Don- ald J. Trump's victory in the November 8, 2016 presidential election promises to bring a sharply different approach to both future and existing fed- eral regulation than has been the case for the past eight years of the Obama Administration, and could mark a return to free market-based regula- tory policies not seen since in Washington, D.C. for nearly thirty years. With a personal background in business, rather than government, Mr. Trump – during the just- ended campaign – has been a consistent critic of innovation-stifling and job-killing overregulation and regulators who ignore or rationalize the far- reaching negative impacts of such regulations on the health of the economy, smaller businesses and consumers. In an August 2016 speech, for example, Mr. Trump stated: "We will impose a temporary mora- torium order on new agency regulations. We'll cancel all illegal and overreaching executive or- ders signed by President Obama. We will elimi- nate all regulations that kill jobs. We will remove the bureaucrats that only know how to kill jobs and replace them with experts who know how to create jobs without regulations." Such a funda- mental change in approach would be perfectly at- tuned to manufactured housing, which offers a free-market, unsubsidized affordable housing so- lution for all Americans, but has been artificially limited and constrained by needless, unnecessar- ily-costly and excessive regulation affecting a wide range of production and post-production activi- ties, as well as consumer financing (for example the Federal Housing Administration's excessive "10-10" rule). A fresh approach to unnecessary and need- lessly-costly federal manufactured housing regula- tion along the lines stated by the president-elect, requiring legitimate ground-up evidence to sup- port any new – or existing regulation – showing both the need for regulation and real benefits for consumers (as required already by the Manufac- tured Housing Improvement Act of 2000), rather than wasteful and unnecessary make-work for en- trenched contractors, would have a tremendously positive impact on the manufactured housing in- dustry and the Americans who rely on manufac- tured housing as the nation's most affordable source of non-subsidized home ownership. To fully appreciate the impact of such a change within the manufactured housing regulatory arena, one need only consider the long and grow- ing list of new regulations – and pseudo-regulatory initiatives -- that are either in process, or have been adopted and/or implemented in recent years. These include, but are not limited to: • The pending U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) "energy conservation" rule for manufactured housing, which would needlessly add more than $6,000.00 to the cost of a new manufactured home for features that are already available for con- sumers who want them. The latest piece of this rule (see, article below), was just published by DOE on No- vember 9, 2016; • HUD's highly-prescriptive, baseless and Trump Victory A Boost For Affordable Housing and Consumers \ 27

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