Renee Greene
should have been able to go to work selling real estate in Arizona quickly,
easily, and with minimal bureaucratic red tape.
That’s
what the law says.
But new testing procedures by the Arizona Department of Real Estate short-circuited the effort to ease licensing hassles for new arrivals in the state less than a month after the law took effect. Department officials now say they are working to fix the problem after receiving complaints from applicants and “feedback” from the governor’s office.
Brian and Renee Greene
Greene was
a licensed realtor in Utah with no complaints against her when she and her
husband moved to Arizona in July 2019. That should have been enough to qualify
her for an Arizona real estate license with minimal paperwork and testing. Arizona’s
new universal
licensing law says that a person licensed for at least a year in
another state with no disciplinary actions qualifies for an equivalent license
here. One of the few exceptions is that certain licensing boards can administer
a state-specific test focused solely on unique nuances of Arizona statutes.
Realtors
historically have had to pass two separate tests in Arizona. One was on
national real estate laws and practices, and it is virtually identical to the
national tests administered in other states. The second test was on Arizona
statutes. The two tests had historically been administered separately, and the
applicants were required to pass both portions to qualify for a real estate
license.
Under the
old testing procedures, it would have been an easy transition for the real
estate department when the new universal licensing law took effect August 27.
Since it already had a separate state-specific test, that would be the only one
new applicants under the law would have to pass.
But beginning
September 23, the Department of Real Estate changed its testing procedure by
combining both the national and state tests into a single exam. Since there is
now only one combined test, anyone seeking to take advantage of the new law must
take the full test, despite the specific language in the statute.
Greene
found that out when she started researching what she would need to get a real
estate sales person’s license last November. She was familiar with the new
Arizona law, and she had used it to get a license from the state Board of Cosmetology,
a process she described as quick and easy.
Despite
the state-only testing requirement, Greene was told no such test was offered by
the real estate department and she would have to take the full national and
state exam. “I just kept hitting this barrier,” Greene said. “Nobody knew what
I needed to do. I contacted the department and they kept responding back with
real basic ‘you need to take the exam.’
“I knew
that there were things that I would need to do. But I didn’t realize that I
would have to take a national exam again coming from one state where I took the
national exam.”
It might
have ended there, except that Renee’s husband Brian is an attorney and former
state legislator in Utah. He’d led efforts in that state to remove bureaucratic
barriers for licensed professionals, and he was a former chairman of the Utah
House Occupational and Professional License Review Committee set up to ensure
regulatory boards implemented the reforms.
Brian
viewed the real estate department’s combining of the national and state tests
as a way to circumvent the new law. He and Renee contacted the department,
pointing out the specific language in the statute and insisting the state
should offer a state-specific exam. But to no avail. The department’s terse
reply was that Renee would have to take the combined test if she wanted an
Arizona realtor’s license.
They eventually
took their complaints to the office of Gov. Doug Ducey, who had championed the
measure in the Legislature and signed the law in April 2019. Brian said he’d
dealt with reluctant bureaucracies as a Utah legislator, and so he was not
surprised when the real estate department threw up barriers.
“This is what
they do,” he said of regulatory boards reluctant to give up their power. “They
think they are the policymakers. The regulatory agencies, they jealously guard
that power that they think they have. They are not the policymakers. They are
the implementers of the policy. They don’t quite get that.”
Louis
Dettorre, spokesman for the Arizona Department of Real Estate, acknowledged
that the national and state tests were combined in September in what amounted
to “bad timing.” But the reason was an update of the department’s teaching and
testing curriculum, not an attempt to circumvent the new law, he said.
Over the
past couple of years, the department has been revising its educational
curriculum, which had not been updated since 1995, Dettorre said. After that
was completed, a new combined test was developed based on the new standards, which
is what was put in place last September. The revision process started long
before the new law was approved, he said. “It was really coincidental and
difficult that it did happen at the same time in a measure of bad timing,” he
said.
The department
got complaints about the combined test and its apparent conflict with the
universal licensing law. That, along with concerns expressed by the Governor’s
office, prompted a re-evaluation of the testing procedure.
So
beginning the first week of April, the department plans to offer a state-only
exam to people who qualify for a license under the universal recognition law,
Dettorre said. New applicants from other states, including anyone who
previously took the combined test but did not pass, will be allowed to take the
state-only exam to obtain a real estate license.
Brian
Greene said he does not necessarily buy the department’s explanation. Even if
the combined test had already been in the works, department officials should
have known that it would conflict with the universal licensing statute and
created a stand-alone state test. They chose not to do so, even after
complaints were raised pointing out the conflict, and apparently until the Governor’s
office intervened, he said.
The fix,
when it comes, will not do Renee Greene much good. She finally got fed up with
the runaround she was getting from the real estate department, and in early
March, she took and passed the combined test. “I don’t want to delay. I don’t
know how long fighting it will take,” she said in explaining why she gave up
and took the test. “I just kind of said how long do I want to keep dragging
this out, or do I want to start working? So I scheduled the exam.”
Taking
the test is no small thing, she said. It is an intensive exam that requires a
great deal of study. It’s particularly frustrating because she’d taken the
national portion of the exam when she got her Utah license.
Jon
Riches, director of national litigation at the Goldwater Institute, said the
real estate department would clearly violate the universal licensing law by
requiring a test that is not specific to Arizona statutes. Regulatory boards
and agencies often resist
licensing reform because the industries they represent benefit from
making the process more difficult, which restricts competition and thereby
drives up the prices they can charge for their services, he said.
“Regulatory
boards in Arizona should get used to the fact that it is no longer business as
usual when they are considering applications from those who are licensed
elsewhere and want to work in this state,” Riches said. “Rather than
resist a reform that is good for consumers, good for licensees, and good for
the state, they should do everything in their power to effectively implement
it.”
Mark Flatten is the
National Investigative Journalist at the Goldwater Institute.
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