WASHINGTON—The Federal Trade Commission has approved a final order settling charges that the Louisiana Real Estate Appraisers Board violated Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act by unreasonably restraining price competition for appraisal services in Louisiana and limiting the freedom of individual appraisers and their customers to engage in bona fide negotiations to determine fees for real estate appraisals.
Under the terms of the order, the Appraisers Board cannot adopt a fee schedule for appraisal services or take any other actions that have the effect of raising, stabilizing, or fixing compensation levels for appraisal services. The Board must also rescind its rule in the Louisiana Administrative Code, known as Rule 31101, which effectively set minimum fees for real estate appraisals, the FTC stated.
First announced in May 2017, the complaint noted that the 2010 Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act required appraisal management companies to pay “a rate that is customary and reasonable for appraisal services performed in the market area of the property being appraised.”
Additional Allegations
The complaint alleged that the Appraisal Board’s regulations exceeded the scope of the federal mandate by requiring appraisal fees to equal or exceed the median fees identified in survey reports commissioned and published by the Board.
The complaint further alleged that the Board investigated and sanctioned companies that paid fees below the specified levels, and that Dodd-Frank neither requires nor authorizes the restrictions that the board imposed, the FTC said.
You May Be (Actually Are) Missing Out!
Don’t forget to check your Spam/Junk email folder if you haven’t been receiving your free, popular and daily CUToday.info news headlines..
And if you haven’t yet signed up for the new email solution on which CUToday.info has partnered with ResponseGenius, you can do so here. Signing up requires less than one minute of your time.
CUToday.info has received very positive response from readers following the move to an improved provider of the daily headlines, but many also noted they did need to go to their Spam/Junk folder and mark it as safe.
The new email solution has not only improved every reader’s delivery experience, but it also features a fresh, new format that is easy to read, especially on mobile devices.
Please note and/or make your IT department or email administrator aware the emails will be coming from the domains CUTodayinfo.com and CUTodayinfoReply.com
