Webbed Feet
Elite Member
- Joined
- Feb 11, 2005
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Canada
Mr. Santora,
I think you misspoke in your second sentence after "Original intent," that is bolded. I suspect you meant the last two words to be "report date."
SMT-3 is easily clarified by the addition of "engagement date," and the retiring of SMT-3 is a mistake in that it is needed to prevent and clarify the differences between (wink, wink, wink) mysteriously similar appraisals with different client names on them and a real new assignment that is Retrospective. An unintended use I know, but a valid one just the same.
I will always agree the drafters did a very poor job communicating the pendulum swing of the market(s) was the differentiating trigger between a "current" analysis and a "retrospective" one. I could read that as their goal, many others did not. So my stand is still one of we should just make it simple for everyone else, toss in engagement date as the determining factor and make it simple. Your examples of what sound like poorly managed appraisal boards are not reasons to strike out entire sections of USPAP. Such examples could be used to suggest striking out all of USPAP and all appraisal boards. One case, in one State, is a poor flag to wave when discussing any statement in USPAP. The document has a bit more meaning than to be disparaged by the actions of one appraisal board.
Your grammar point is well taken. But only in as much as USPAP persists in failing to require the actual use of the words with defined meanings and suggests grammar instead as if that patches everything up. Just like many recent threads involving the use of Hypothetical Conditions and those people in the threads proposing not using the defined words just because USPAP does not say they must be used. My reaction? Stupid! It is easy to just use the darned words! So why not? Oh yes! I remember! The reason is I should treat all intended users like they are morons, and the expectation is all appraisers are too stupid to provide the definition in their reports along with the words. All instead of USPAP just saying to use the darned words, provide the definitions.
I like quite a bit of your rationalizations and points. But I really feel if you fail to address this idiotic "Client Name Change" issue in the process, in order to provide a clear and positive stop to this (wink, wink, wink) mysteriously identical cloned report using a prior effective date nonsense, then you are contributing to problems versus removing them. I still see SMT-3, once cleaned up and improved, as the separator between a USPAP violating client name change that is masquerading under guise of use of a prior effective date, and using a prior effective date as part of a new Retrospective assignment.
Webbed.
I think you misspoke in your second sentence after "Original intent," that is bolded. I suspect you meant the last two words to be "report date."
SMT-3 is easily clarified by the addition of "engagement date," and the retiring of SMT-3 is a mistake in that it is needed to prevent and clarify the differences between (wink, wink, wink) mysteriously similar appraisals with different client names on them and a real new assignment that is Retrospective. An unintended use I know, but a valid one just the same.
I will always agree the drafters did a very poor job communicating the pendulum swing of the market(s) was the differentiating trigger between a "current" analysis and a "retrospective" one. I could read that as their goal, many others did not. So my stand is still one of we should just make it simple for everyone else, toss in engagement date as the determining factor and make it simple. Your examples of what sound like poorly managed appraisal boards are not reasons to strike out entire sections of USPAP. Such examples could be used to suggest striking out all of USPAP and all appraisal boards. One case, in one State, is a poor flag to wave when discussing any statement in USPAP. The document has a bit more meaning than to be disparaged by the actions of one appraisal board.
Your grammar point is well taken. But only in as much as USPAP persists in failing to require the actual use of the words with defined meanings and suggests grammar instead as if that patches everything up. Just like many recent threads involving the use of Hypothetical Conditions and those people in the threads proposing not using the defined words just because USPAP does not say they must be used. My reaction? Stupid! It is easy to just use the darned words! So why not? Oh yes! I remember! The reason is I should treat all intended users like they are morons, and the expectation is all appraisers are too stupid to provide the definition in their reports along with the words. All instead of USPAP just saying to use the darned words, provide the definitions.
I like quite a bit of your rationalizations and points. But I really feel if you fail to address this idiotic "Client Name Change" issue in the process, in order to provide a clear and positive stop to this (wink, wink, wink) mysteriously identical cloned report using a prior effective date nonsense, then you are contributing to problems versus removing them. I still see SMT-3, once cleaned up and improved, as the separator between a USPAP violating client name change that is masquerading under guise of use of a prior effective date, and using a prior effective date as part of a new Retrospective assignment.
Webbed.
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