- Joined
- Jan 15, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- California
There is almost no upper limit to what the users can ask for. Every one of these lenders remains free to ask for more if they think it's important enough to them to do so. That they're now asking for less in some ways than they used to is a user-driven decision, not an appraisal standards issue. Our limitation is that we cannot allow their minimums to undermine our own minimums.Changing USPAP definitions /verbiage to a more defined boundary of what practices are under the umbrella of appraisal practice would enable the profession to withstand large scale adoption of a "Dumb idea" by a major user such as fannie- or at least prevent them from claiming appraisals done with the dumb idea are s USPAP compliant- because they would not be.
Telling all the users across all appraisal disciplines they cannot ask for less than X just because you can't reach the one type of use/user by any other means is like using a sledgehammer to drive that thumbtack. Not to mention inherently immoral and unprofessional.
User-driven requirements are exactly that. We're here to work toward the legitimate interests of our uses, not to dictate terms to them.
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