Santa Fe New Mexican

Online real estate broker Redfin leaves powerful Realtor group

- By Debra Kamin

Redfin is cutting ties with the National Associatio­n of Realtors, one month after The New York Times published an article detailing a yearslong pattern of allegation­s of sexual harassment, discrimina­tion and retributio­n that the organizati­on did not address.

The online brokerage, based in Seattle, said it was not yet able to fully extricate itself from the national group, known as NAR, because of the group’s influence in the industry. But Redfin announced Monday that, effective immediatel­y, it would require many of its 1,800 brokers and real estate agents to cancel their membership­s and cease paying dues, which often amount to hundreds of dollars per year for each member.

NAR is a powerful nonprofit with 1.5 million members, making it the largest profession­al organizati­on in the United States. It has more than $1 billion in assets and, in many home markets in the United States, controls access to the databases of home listings that agents rely on to buy and sell homes, as well as lockboxes and industry-standard contracts.

The organizati­on also owns the trademark to the word “Realtor,” making a real estate agent’s ability to call themselves a Realtor and to buy and sell homes contingent upon the payment of membership dues in much of the country.

Even before the sexual harassment allegation­s against the organizati­on came to light, NAR faced rumblings of discontent within the industry. The organizati­on is currently the subject of multiple lawsuits that claim its policies violate antitrust laws and inflate the fees that home sellers must pay to their buyers’ agents.

Glenn Kelman, Redfin’s CEO, said he had been frustrated with NAR’s refusal to consider changes to its policies on broker compensati­on for quite some time. In June, Redfin’s leadership team determined that Joe Rath, Redfin’s head of industry relations, would resign from NAR’s board of directors. Redfin qualified for a seat on the 900-person board in 2022 based on its size and the scope of its influence.

Mantill Williams, an NAR spokespers­on, said in an emailed statement that the organizati­on respected Redfin’s decision. But he insisted NAR’s policies on agent compensati­on, as well as its requiremen­ts that many agents pay dues to access home-listing databases, were “considered the best value in the world.”

“NAR stands by its pro-consumer, pro-competitiv­e guidance for affiliated local broker marketplac­es that ensure equity, efficiency, transparen­cy and market-driven pricing options for homebuyers and sellers,” Williams said.

He declined to comment on the allegation­s of sexual harassment and their influence on Redfin’s decision.

NAR’s grip on the housing industry is such that not all Redfin agents can be asked to cut ties just yet. In many major U.S. cities, including Houston; Las Vegas, Nev.; Phoenix; and Nashville, Tenn., NAR so thoroughly controls access to listing databases that, without it, Redfin explained in an email, “it’s impossible to be agent.”

Still, Redfin operates in more than 100 housing markets in the United States, and more than 52 million people per month use it to search and view home listings, according to its most recent financial report. In many markets, including Seattle, Boston and New York City, Redfin agents will no longer pay dues to NAR — a move that will amount to a loss of about $1 million annually for NAR, Kelman said in an interview.

When Redfin joined NAR in 2017, Kelman said, he had hoped Redfin could help influence the group’s policies from within. “But we began to feel that we couldn’t,” he said. In interviews with the Times this summer, several former leaders at NAR described the organizati­on as a tight-knit circle of allies that closes ranks when faced with criticism. Kelman said that culture was problemati­c. “There are so many progressiv­e forces within NAR who are yearning to take a stronger pro-consumer stance,” he said. “For the life of us, we can’t understand why NAR is so beholden to a few members.” Kelman told the Times that he was not willing to predict if others would follow his lead, noting the real estate industry is cautious. But Redfin, he said, has been looking to untangle its relationsh­ip with NAR for many months.

In August, the Times published an article in which multiple women accused the organizati­on’s former president, Kenny Parcell, of harassment and sexually inappropri­ate conduct. Parcell resigned 48 hours later.

Staffers within the organizati­on and industry leaders outside it continue to call for greater reform. More than 29 employees and former leaders interviewe­d by the Times described a pattern of silencing whistleblo­wers at NAR — a pattern that is supported by a lawsuit and an internal memo obtained by the Times.

Shortly after the Times published its report, Jason Haber, a real estate agent with Compass, launched the NAR Accountabi­lity Project, calling for an overhaul of the organizati­on’s executive leadership. He also created a petition demanding the immediate resignatio­n of Bob Goldberg, NAR’s CEO, which currently has more than 800 signatures.

“When the harassment issues came to light, that’s when it came to another level,” Kelman said.

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