Tim Hicks (Texas)
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Texas
This is typical forum. Lets make a mountain out of a molehill.
John said:The main thrust of the disclosure requiremnts in the new SOW Rule is that intended users must be able to understand the scope of work that was performed. The passage causing angst is merely a statement that full understanding of the scope of work might require an appraiser to disclose things not done.
An example might be those who currently state they "did inspect" when in fact they only looked at photos. For an intended user to truly understand the scope, one would have to disclose that the "inpsection" did not involve actually visiting the property.
Have a good day
JC
leelansford said:The 2006 USPAP will be in effect for 18 months. The goal is to go to a 2-year cycle.
So going from a 3-year cycle to a 2-year cycle – by first interposing two 18-month cycles. :icon_smile:The 2006 USPAP will be in effect for 18 months. The goal is to go to a 2-year cycle.
Except that the 2005 edition has criteria for defining “necessary” that don’t appear in the 2006 edition. It is possible that an appraiser might opine that what is necessary without the criteria is different from what is necessary under the criteria.FYI: The "departure" of the Departure Rule (effective 7/1/06) does not change any of the responsibilities of the appraiser in developing and communicating a necessary approach to value. If an approach to value was necessary in an appraisal you did yesterday, the approach will be necessary on 7/1/06.
APPRAISER’S PEERS: other appraisers who have expertise and competency in a similar type assignment. the same or a similar type of assignment.
George Hatch said:Insofar as their boilerplate deliberately leaves several areas open to confusion, I'm not only entitled to clarify those areas - I'm required to do so in order to make my workproduct fit within standards.