Barbara Jennings, director of the Academy of Staging and Redesign and the International Staging and Redesign Center is the author of 13 books for the staging and redesign industry. They also have a Certification Program for stagers and one for redesigners.
August 14, 2009
Patti Morrow enlists help of another staging association
Barbara Jennings, director of the Academy of Staging and Redesign and the International Staging and Redesign Center is the author of 13 books for the staging and redesign industry. They also have a Certification Program for stagers and one for redesigners.
July 26, 2009
Patti Morrow [IDPC] “sets the stage” for truth about interior design regulation
TRUTH vs. MISINFORMATION
Stagers’ Statement, Part II
A few months ago, one of the staging trade associations put out a message regarding stagers and interior design regulation which was fraught with errors – it was evident that the writer really did not understand how stagers could be impacted by such regulation. Because the gist of their message was to discourage stagers from becoming pro-active in learning about and/or resisting government-imposed regulation which could potentially hurt them, IDPC published a detailed position paper entitled, The Collateral Effect of Interior Design Regulation on Real Estate Stagers, which provided stagers with the basis on which they could take part or at least become educated on this issue. Directly following the dissemination of our statement, we were flooded with emails from stagers and re-designers, thanking us for bringing this issue to their attention.
Subsequently, in an attempt to defend their position, the staging association in question went to the one source where they will never hear the truth – ASID. Of course, everyone knows you don’t ask the fox if he’d like to share access to the henhouse. Unfortunately, stagers who may be misled back into apathy could one day find themselves victims of ruthless prosecution in a state that has enacted licensing, like Florida. ASID is a biased source with an agenda to impose anti-competitive, unnecessary licensing in every state – they did nothing more than repeat the same old unsubstantiated rhetoric and party line. In this staging association’s own words, they went to the party “responsible for legislation pertaining to the Interior Design industry.” Going to ASID for unbiased information on licensing was neither “responsible,” “accurate,” nor “reliable.”
Click on the link below to read the corrected answers to the additional misleading information distributed to stagers:
http://www.idpcinfo.org/Stagers_-_Truth_vs._Misinformation.pdf
June 4, 2009
Do interior design licensing laws impact real estate/home stagers?
The Collateral Effect of Interior Design Regulation on Real Estate Stagers
Patti Morrow, IDPC, June 1, 2009
Recently, we became aware of positions and statements originating from the staging profession purporting that regulation of interior designers does not affect real estate/home stagers and they should not become pro-active in protecting their freedoms.
This is not only far from true, but is a dangerous position that could potentially place real estate stagers at great risk. Practice laws in states like Florida and Alabama have been a detriment to real estate stagers, and if similar practice acts are allowed to be enacted, stagers will continue be impacted. Sadly, the advice which has been given to stagers recommending that they do not look into this issue lacks a clear understanding of the nuances of regulation, and it appears that the objective lies in self-promotion rather than member protection, and serves only to encourage stagers to withdraw back into complacency instead of continuing to actively engage in this important issue that has and will continue to impact staging professionals if left unchecked.
Click on this link to read entire paper (downloadable and printable): http://www.idpcinfo.org/IDPC_Stager_Statement_060109.pdf