- Joined
- Jan 15, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- California
Yeah, I saw it. Even if true, #whocares
Why do appraisers assume only the most complex and rural assignments remain ?If only the most complex, rural assignments remain, what work do they see a PAREA grad doing in the coming years? It would seem they are creating a training program for assignments that will no longer exists.
No, it sounds like they have to finish the 1000 PAREA hours ( doing mock reports?) pass the exam, get certified. The amount of hours and minimum of a year has been reduced. I think the advantage is consistent training wrt PAREA. The disadvantage is the newbies will have very little field experience and might have culture shock when they start doing real appraisal assignments.So basically you will have new certified appraisers that are trainees but without the trainee restrictions.
No, it sounds like they have to finish the 1000 PAREA hours ( doing mock reports?) pass the exam, get certified. The amount of hours and minimum of a year has been reduced. I think the advantage is consistent training wrt PAREA. The disadvantage is the newbies will have very little field experience and might have culture shock when they start doing real appraisal assignments.
I don't think the field will be flooded with newbies, who the heck will want to do it considering the payoff on residential side is so uncertain. Those that want to become appraisers though, at least it gives them the opportunity. How well they will fare in actual working conditions with client pressure and all the scrutiny on reports is the unknown. The people in charge thinking they can ask for even faster turn time are out of touch with reality, unless they want a real piece of garbage report and want to sacrifice all the newbies who will have short careers if their reports are so b
Why do appraisers assume only the most complex and rural assignments remain ?
There is no proof of that. Unless waivers take a big hold of the industry, but would interest rates rise if that happened? Remember a waiver is not just waiving the appraisal, it is waiving the warranties and relief ( liability for the value ) for bank or lender-and putting it back on the tax payer. That means, if a loan goes bad, teh lender is absolved for the value, and taxpayers alone are stuck. Too much of that and the investors buying the loans might not want to keep their confidence wrt lower rates or down payment terms.
Idk, just speculating like everyone else is, but those are my 2 cents - four cents now with inflation.
Wow, thanks for uploading this as I had not seen it.
Yes. After finishing a PAREA course they can apply for certification, and they may or may not have a mentor to guide them through their first live assignment. Beyond crazy, but just read some of these posts. Even now some appraisers are still debating the merits of PAREA.So basically you will have new certified appraisers that are trainees but without the trainee restrictions.