- Joined
- May 2, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- Arkansas
If appraisers spent all their time trying to keep up with the nuances of government appraising, they'd have to set aside a full day every week and then figure some way to keep that all straight in their head and even then, it won't stop clients from being as ignorant as the appraiser of those tidbits of ever changing edicts, a problem that USPAP shares with their wholly unnecessary, pointless, and inscrutable regulations...So in 94 we need six reporting options and those were self-contained, summary, and restricted and each can be either limited or complete - all of which was nonsense as one ARA/MAI instructor noted - what is "self-contained" - a history of the world? One report I saw in Arkansas started by saying Hernando (not to be confused with our Fernando) De Soto was the first European... blah blah blah. Gimme a breakappraisers to know the requirements that apply to assignments, and act in accord with those requirements,
Now we've almost unraveled those six options down to 2 reporting options. We've created, then destroyed, then added piffle without really any perfecting of the practice. Do you think that a report prepared under 1992 USPAP would arrive at a different value than under 2020? Or, that if it did, there would be any certitude that it was more "accurate" (whatever that means in an opinion.)
Other standards and their acronyms
Government Appraisal Standard Practice (GASP)
Government Requirements of Appraisal Standard Practice (GRASP)
Government Ordered Operating Practice (GOOP)
They need something catchier than USPAP... perhaps we should form a company and recreate a standard so we can sell the government on the idea of adopting by reference and making appraisers buy it every other year...
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