Section 24.204(a) General.

This provision requires that no one may be required to move from a dwelling without a comparable replacement dwelling having been made available. In addition, § 24.204(a) requires that, “where possible, three or more comparable replacement dwellings shall be made available.” Thus, the basic standard for the number of referrals required under this section is three. Only in situations where three comparable replacement dwellings are not available (e.g., when the local housing market does not contain three comparable dwellings) may the Agency make fewer than three referrals.

Appendix A Subpart C – General Relocation Requirements

Intent of 24.202 through 24.207 (ROW-C)   ROW-C Note: This section includes the subsections listed below and they are also listed under the heading Related Uniform Code located in the sidebar of this page.  Clicking on a code within the sidebar will allow you to discuss and review comments for that code and its subsections. If your discussion topic does not reasonably fit into one of those subsections but is somewhat related, then this is a good section to start your new discussion by clicking the New Discussion button located on the upper right of this page. Below is a quick reference to the subsections. Section 24.202 Applicability and Section 205(c) Services to be provided. In extraordinary circumstances, when a displaced…

Section 24.106(b). Expenses incidental to transfer of title to the agency.

Generally, the Agency is able to pay such incidental costs directly and, where feasible, is required to do so. In order to prevent the property owner from making unnecessary out-of-pocket expenditures and to avoid duplication of expenses, the property owner should be informed early in the acquisition process of the Agency’s intent to make such arrangements. Such expenses must be reasonable and necessary.

Section 24.104(c).

Before acceptance of an appraisal, the review appraiser must determine that the appraiser’s documentation, including valuation data and analysis of that data, demonstrates the soundness of the appraiser’s opinion of value. For the purposes of this part, an acceptable appraisal is any appraisal that, on its own, meets the requirements of § 24.103. An approved appraisal is the one acceptable appraisal that is determined to best fulfill the requirement to be the basis for the amount believed to be just compensation. Recognizing that appraisal is not an exact science, there may be more than one acceptable appraisal of a property, but for the purposes of this part, there can be only one approved appraisal. At the Agency’s discretion, for a…

Section 24.104(b).

In developing an independent approved or recommended value, the review appraiser may reference any acceptable resource, including acceptable parts of any appraisal, including an otherwise unacceptable appraisal. When a review appraiser develops an independent value, while retaining the appraisal review, that independent value also becomes the approved appraisal of the fair market value for Uniform Act Section 301(3) purposes. It is within Agency discretion to decide whether a second review is needed if the first review appraiser establishes a value different from that in the appraisal report or reports on the property.

Section 24.104(a).

This paragraph states that the review appraiser is to review the appraiser’s presentation and analysis of market information and that it is to be reviewed against § 24.103 and other applicable requirements, including, to the extent appropriate, the Uniform Appraisal Standards for Federal Land Acquisition. The appraisal review is to be a technical review by an appropriately qualified review appraiser. The qualifications of the review appraiser and the level of explanation of the basis for the review appraiser’s recommended (or approved) value depend on the complexity of the appraisal problem. If the initial appraisal submitted for review is not acceptable, the review appraiser is to communicate and work with the appraiser to the greatest extent possible to facilitate the appraiser’s…

Section 24.104 Review of appraisals.

The term “review appraiser” is used rather than “reviewing appraiser,” to emphasize that “review appraiser” is a separate specialty and not just an appraiser who happens to be reviewing an appraisal. Federal Agencies have long held the perspective that appraisal review is a unique skill that, while it certainly builds on appraisal skills, requires more. The review appraiser should possess both appraisal technical abilities and the ability to be the two-way bridge between the Agency’s real property valuation needs and the appraiser. Agency review appraisers typically perform a role greater than technical appraisal review. They are often involved in early project development. Later they may be involved in devising the scope of work statements and participate in making appraisal assignments…

Section 24.103(d)(1).

The appraiser and review appraiser must each be qualified and competent to perform the appraisal and appraisal review assignments, respectively. Among other qualifications, State licensing or certification and professional society designations can help provide an indication of an appraiser’s abilities.