The Spring Educators Conference was a Shining Success
The Spring Educators Conference was held at the McKimmon Center on March 27, 2025. The theme was “Raleighwood: How to Become an Education Star.” Commission Chair T. Anthony Lindsey, and Vice Chair Bill Aceto addressed the educators and answered their questions about Commission policy and related issues. Executive Director Miriam Baer presented the state of the Commission, and education staff conducted several sessions to enhance the instructors’ education toolboxes.
Is radon a material fact?
A material fact is any fact that could affect a reasonable person’s decision to buy, sell, or lease real estate. Real estate brokers have a duty to take reasonable steps to discover and disclose material facts about a property to all parties in the transaction, regardless of who their agency agreement may be with. Many properties in North Carolina will have some level of radon in them. The EPA has determined that a radon reading of 4.0 picocuries per liter (pCi/L) or higher is the level that is dangerous enough to trigger remediation. If a broker knows prior to listing a property that it has been tested for radon and received a radon reading at or above 4.0 pCi/L, the broker has a duty to disclose this information prior to contract formation. If the broker discovers this information after contract formation, they must disclose this information immediately.
You are invited!
The monthly Real Estate Commission meetings are always open to the public, and you are invited to attend in person or online via Zoom. The meeting tomorrow will be held at the DoubleTree by Hilton New Bern – Riverfront, Bradham Room, 100 Middle Street, New Bern, NC 28560. A Zoom link will be available at ncrec.gov on the day of the meeting.