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HCR 79 asks Hawaii's Insurance Commissioner to study reforming or eliminating statewide title insurance to reduce upfront home‑buying costs, with a report due before 2026 session.
HCR 79 asks Hawaii's Insurance Commissioner to study reforming or eliminating statewide title insurance to reduce upfront home‑buying costs, with a report due before 2026 session.
Note: The submitted document contains mixed/duplicated text from several resolutions (references to the USS Delaware, an “Opportunity Youth Day” title, and a Hawaii concurrent resolution on title insurance). This summary focuses on the clear substantive text that corresponds to HCR 79 as introduced in the Hawaii Legislature: a concurrent resolution requesting a study of title insurance reform to reduce home‑ownership barriers.
HCR 79 requests that the Hawaii Insurance Commissioner study the potential impacts of reforming or eliminating statewide title insurance requirements as a way to reduce upfront costs and other financial barriers to home ownership. The resolution frames title insurance as a one‑time payment intended to protect buyers from unknown claims affecting property ownership, and posits that its cost can be a barrier for prospective homeowners.
No budget, implementation details, or statutory text changes are contained in the resolution — it is a study request and informational measure, not a law or binding regulatory change.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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