Russell you sound like an exception to the norm and I commend you for the intense effort you appear to make in dealing with all sides of issues fairly.
I guess I posted this link because I have read posts where agents seem to be very defensive and almost in denial that these unsavory relationships and business practices not only exist but are very common.
The influence of one profession over another so great that national firms are more concerned with the criteria of the realtor than the criteria of their client..the buyer. I think the courts decision on the matter and their opinion makes it very clear the situation exists and it exists on a national level to a greater degree than some want to openly admit.
Many home inspection franchises (and this suit proves this) rely so heavily on their agent referrals that it has in effect jaded their very way of doing business...and performing inspections. They are conforming to the practices and principles thrust upon them by those that ethically and lawfully should not be influencing how inspections are performed.
Even ASHI ammended their code of ethics to specifically address this problem. As a result some national franchises such as U.S. Inspect are no longer members because they wish to continue their questionable affiliations with their real clients...the agents. This fact was made known in a Maryland court case you can read at
http://www.independentinspectors.org/pdf-files/usinspect.pdf Granted it is much cheaper on the advertising budget to put an ad in the local real estate association magazine whose subscription base are members...realtors, than it is to put an ad in the yellow pages big enough to compete with the other ads. I know what ad space costs in the yellow pages in comparison to a much bigger ad in the local r.e. asociations bi-monthly magazine. The realtor is the most logical avenue to concentrate the marketing dollar and effort toward. I agree it is easier and more efficient to go into an agents office and hand out flyers than it is to stand on a corner passing them out to whoever will take one.
But is it ethical? Is it how Home inspectors REALLY want to do business? To heck with the fact that the liability could land you in a court room. That is so far beside the point...it's the bigger problem, it's the damage it is causing a profession that at this moment in time is still struggling for the respect and trust of the average consumer..the home buyer. In the past decade the Home inspection field has seen a great boom in demand for their services. A boom big enough to enable success independently.
How many home inspectors would rather run their business their way than have it dictated to them by someone else. How many home inspectors have ever experienced the feeling of having their a** reamed thoroughly by an agent only to have the conversation ultimately end with "i'll take my business elsewhere". Does it matter that you did your job to the letter? Does it matter you have upheld your profession in a manner 100% beyond reproach? No, none of that matters...the only thing that matters is the buyer is alarmed and it's YOUR FAULT. Anyone that has been in business for a length of time has had that happen to them. Rather than tell them where to get off and risk financial suicide it's easier to conform to the demands and keep the phone ringing. Even if it is at the cost of the testosterone generating body parts you entered the profession with.
Those that know where their next meal comes from are waiting for someone to come along and change things. That is never going to happen. New laws or enforcing old laws isn't going to change things. Making the agents change is impossible and you know what...it's not their fault. It's the home inspectors that have to change their thinking and their priorities. Why because it hurts the entire profession. It hurts every single honest working inspector who just wants to do his job and feed his kids and pay the mortgage.
Realtors who want to argue this with me can not convince me otherwise as I have lived it breathed it a lot longer than some agents have been selling houses.
In 1992 HUD was appalled at the evidence I presented and it led to several changes in my area. It also led to a lot of threats and a lot of lost business and a lot of ruler slapped wrists in the real estate world. Did it help my bottom line? I don't know but I do know it helped the industry...MY industry in ways that money can't measure. Changes ARE possible without starving.