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TALCB Member John H. Eichelberger III during the Board's final quarterly meeting of 2023.
Show Up To Comment on Specialized Assignments
TALCB's first quarterly meeting of the year will include public input on a specialized assignment type where examples of peers’ actions are not readily available. This feedback will help the agency establish a framework to apply to all specialized assignments.
Submit comments in person at the next Board meeting on Friday, February 23 at 9:00 a.m. or email to [email protected] by April 1, 2024.
Other agenda highlights:
- License holders may earn continuing education credit for attending in person. The meeting time must be a minimum of two hours to earn credit.
- Election of Vice-Chair, Secretary
- Appointments to four committees
- Three rules up for possible adoption
Can't attend in person? Join the meeting livestream instead.
 In the last four pages of TALCB's staff reports is the section on enforcement. For fiscal year 2023 (July ’22–July ’23) less than four percent of license holders were the subject of a formal complaint filed with the Board, less than one percent of license holders received formal discipline, and typically more than 90 percent of complaints received are dismissed.
Click here for an overview of TALCB’S formal complaint process including what constitutes a complaint that the Board can accept and how to properly submit.
AMCs must complete reporting by March 31, 2024. Appraisal Management Companies that do not comply will be unable to perform services on federally related transactions.
The current registry reporting period is January 1 to December 31.
The current edition of the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) is effective through 2023. The new edition of the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) became effective January 1, 2024, and there is no end date.
One of the notable changes to the new edition is an update to the ETHICS RULE related to nondiscrimination. USPAP prohibiting bias is not new, the addition makes that stance more explicit.
Effective January 1, 2026, appraiser education will include topics on fair housing and appraisal bias. The Appraiser Qualifications Board adopted these changes in June: eight hours of qualifying education and seven hours of continuing education on topics of valuation bias and fair housing laws and regulation, for all license types. Afterwards, license holders will be required to take a four-hour valuation bias course every two years.
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