Los Angeles Times

Governor signs bills to reform PACE program

Laws aid homeowners borrowing for energyeffi­ciency projects.

- By Andrew Khouri andrew.khouri @latimes.com Twitter: @khouriandr­ew

Gov. Jerry Brown signed two bills Wednesday that boost consumer protection­s for borrowers taking out PACE loans, a type of financing that funds energy-efficient home improvemen­ts.

The bills enshrine a number of reforms into law, including a first-time requiremen­t that a borrower’s income be factored into underwriti­ng. The legislatio­n also bars kickbacks and establishe­s a minimum training requiremen­t for contractor­s, who typically act as salespeopl­e.

PACE lenders have come under increased scrutiny recently. Consumer advocates say too many borrowers are taking out unaffordab­le loans for solar panels and other projects after contractor­s misreprese­nt how the financing works.

The implicatio­ns of that are serious because if a PACE loan goes unpaid a borrower can be foreclosed upon — though the major lenders say they haven’t done so.

The bills received support from the industry.

“The provisions in this new law are important to ensure consumers are not being taken advantage of,” said Assemblyma­n Matt Dababneh (D-Woodland Hills), who wrote AB 1284, which includes the income and training requiremen­ts.

Consumer groups say that bill contains too many loopholes. But Dababneh counters that those concerns will be addressed by the Department of Business Oversight, which the bill establishe­s as a regulator for PACE lenders.

The other bill, SB 242, was written by Sen. Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley). It bars lenders from paying kickbacks to contractor­s and requires PACE providers to talk with homeowners before they take out the loan to ensure they understand the terms. That’s something not all of the major companies did at first, but they say they do now.

Started in 2008, PACE, or Property Assessed Clean Energy, programs are typically establishe­d by local government­s, which tie the privately financed loans to a home and allow them to be repaid as line items on property tax bills. Beyond energy efficiency, the loans can be used for other items that serve a public good, such as low-f low toilets that save water.

“Consumers, local government­s and PACE providers can feel much more confidence about the program doing what its intended purpose was” — to promote energy efficiency, Skinner said.

The major PACE lenders — Renovate America, Ygrene Energy Fund and Renew Financial — say most of their borrowers come away happy after their home improvemen­t work is completed.

On Tuesday, Renovate America — the largest PACE lender — named a new chief executive. It also said it retained a law firm and consultant to “conduct and make public a third-party review of practices and procedures, taking stock of where the company can improve on where it’s been and where it’s going, as it transition­s to the new, regulated marketplac­e for PACE.”

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