The Appraisal Foundation recently announced that the Appraisal Standards Board (ASB) adopted revisions for the 2010-2011 edition of the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) at its public meeting in New Orleans.
The 2010-2011 edition of USPAP will be valid for two years, effective January 1, 2010 through December 31, 2011. As with the current edition of USPAP, the new edition will include guidance from the ASB in the form of the USPAP Advisory Opinions and the USPAP Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs).
The new edition of USPAP is scheduled to be available by October 1, 2009. However, appraisers and users of appraisal services should begin familiarizing themselves with the changes to the document as soon as possible. To this end, the ASB has issued a Summary of Actions document, which explains the changes that are being made and the rationale for those changes. The Summary of Actions is available by visiting the following link to The Appraisal Foundation’s website:
http://commerce.appraisalfoundation.org/html/Docs/2009_ASB_summary_of_actions.pdf
Most of the revisions that will become effective on January 1, 2010 involved improving the clarity, understandability and enforceablility of the ETHICS RULE, the COMPETENCY RULE and STANDARD 3: Appraisal Review, Development and Reporting.
There were also two significant changes:
- A requirement was added to the Conduct section of the ETHICS RULE, stating that, prior to accepting an assignment (and if discovered at any time during the assignment), an appraiser must disclose to the client and in the report certification any services regarding the subject property performed by the appraiser within the prior three years, as an appraiser or in any other capacity.
- The appraiser’s obligation to allow a client access to his or her workfile when providing a Restricted Use Appraisal Report was removed.
“The change to the Conduct section of the ETHICS RULE is significant,” said Sandra Guilfoil, Chair of the ASB, the Foundation Board that promulgates USPAP. “It creates a new requirement for appraisers to disclose, up front to prospective clients, any involvement the appraiser might have had with the property within the past three years.”
The ASB believed this new requirement was necessary for public trust. “In a current climate with a focus on things like transparency in financial transactions, the ASB did not believe that USPAP was adequately serving public trust by allowing an appraiser to complete an assignment without initially notifying the client of any recent involvement with the property. The ASB believes the client has a right to know about an appraiser’s involvement and make the decision whether or not to engage the appraiser in that particular assignment,” said Guilfoil.
In fact, the ASB believed this particular revision was so important that it issued a series of Q&A’s on this topic in April 2009, providing guidance to appraisers almost eight months before the change takes effect. “We understand this new obligation may be unpopular with some appraisers and are doing our best to provide them with guidance,” Guilfoil stated.
Finally, Guilfoil added, “We encourage appraisers and users of appraisal services to read through the Summary of Actions now, and thoroughly familiarize themselves with the requirements well in advance of the January 1, 2010 effective date.”
Source: The Appraisal Foundation July Newsletter
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