Current:Home > FinanceNational Association of Realtors CEO stepping down; ex Chicago Sun-Times CEO tapped as interim hire -Prime Capital Blueprint
National Association of Realtors CEO stepping down; ex Chicago Sun-Times CEO tapped as interim hire
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-06 22:54:24
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The CEO of the National Association of Realtors is stepping down nearly two months before his planned retirement, a move that comes just two days after the trade group was dealt a punishing judgement in federal court over its guidelines on real estate agent commissions.
The Chicago-based NAR said Thursday that Bob Goldberg would be stepping down after a 30-year career at the trade association. Nykia Wright, former CEO of the Chicago Sun-Times, was tapped to take over on an interim basis, beginning Nov. 20.
In June, Goldberg, 66, announced plans to retire on Dec. 31. His early exit comes during a rough week for the NAR. On Tuesday a federal jury in Kansas City, Missouri, ordered the trade association and some of the nation’s biggest real estate brokerages to pay almost $1.8 billion in damages after finding they artificially inflated commissions paid to real estate agents.
The class-action suit was filed in 2019 on behalf of 500,000 home sellers in Missouri and some border towns. The jury found that the defendants “conspired to require home sellers to pay the broker representing the buyer of their homes in violation of federal antitrust law.”
NAR and the other defendants could be on the hook for more than $5 billion if the court decides to award the plaintiffs treble damages, which allows plaintiffs to potentially receive up to three times actual or compensatory damages. The NAR said it plans to appeal.
In a statement Thursday, Goldberg said: “After announcing my decision to retire earlier this year, and as I reflected on my 30 years at NAR, I determined last month that now is the right time for this extraordinary organization to look to the future.”
He will serve as an executive consultant during the transition to Wright, the NAR said.
Goldberg’s departure marks the second major executive shuffle at the NAR in recent weeks. In August, former NAR President Kenny Parcell resigned following a report in The New York Times that detailed sexual harassment allegations against the Utah broker by employees and members of the NAR.
Tracy Kasper, then NAR’s president-elect, took over immediately after Parcell’s exit.
The NAR touts more than 1.5 million members. Real estate agents must be dues-paying members of the NAR in order to advertise themselves as Realtors.
Its size and influence in the U.S. real estate industry has not only made the trade association a target in litigation, but also brought it under the scrutiny of the Justice Department. The department filed a complaint in 2020 against the NAR, alleging it established and enforced rules and policies that illegally restrained competition in residential real estate services.
The government withdrew a proposed settlement agreement in 2021, saying the move would allow it to conduct a broader investigation of NAR’s rules and conduct.
The NAR and several national brokerages face another federal lawsuit over agent commissions, filed Tuesday in the Western District of Missouri by the same legal team in the Missouri case. This complaint seeks class-action status covering anyone in the U.S. who sold a home in the last five years.
And the potential fallout from the 2019 case, should the court issue a final judgement potentially forcing the NAR and real estate brokerages to change the rules that now determine the commissions agents receive on the sale of a home and which party to the transaction foots the bill.
For now, charting the way that NAR deals with these challenges will fall on Wright, 44, who steered the Chicago Sun-Times’ digital transformation, among other challenges.
“I am honored to join the organization at this important moment, when the opportunity to make a difference in the evolving real estate landscape has never been greater,” Wright said in a prepared statement Thursday.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Mother of 4 children lost in Amazon for 40 days initially survived plane crash, oldest sibling says
- Tijuana mayor says she'll live at army base after threats, 7 bodies found in truck
- Indigenous group requests internet blackout to limit negative impact of smartphones
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- New dinosaur species Vectipelta barretti discovered on Britain's Isle of Wight
- Selling Sunset's Mary Fitzgerald Shares She Suffered Septic Miscarriage
- How Beyoncé and Jay-Z's Love Only Grew Stronger With Time
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- As Western Wildfires Worsen, FEMA Is Denying Most People Who Ask For Help
Ranking
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Key takeaways from Antony Blinken's visit to China
- Peter Thomas Roth 24-Hour Flash Deal: Save 77% On 1 Year’s Worth of Retinol
- Woman declared dead knocks on coffin during her own wake in Ecuador: It gave us all a fright
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Bruce Willis' Wife Emma Shares Sweet Pics of the Actor With Daughter Mabel on Child's 11th Birthday
- Mod Sun Shares What Saved His Life After Avril Lavigne Breakup
- Senators write letter of support to Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Senators write letter of support to Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich
Why Clearing Brazil's Forests For Farming Can Make It Harder To Grow Crops
Kim Kardashian Apologizes for Saying Kourtney and Khloe Looked Like Clowns During 2018 Tokyo Trip
SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
Peter Thomas Roth Flash Deal: Get $109 Worth of Hydrating Products for Just $58
How Beyoncé and Jay-Z's Love Only Grew Stronger With Time
Tackling 'Energy Justice' Requires Better Data. These Researchers Are On It