2nd June 2009, 09:11 PM
For a longtime now we have been bombarded with EU directives for this, EU directives for that, EU directives for t'other. I'm sure we all read at some point some new idea from Brussells that we think is idiotic, that we have rolled our eyes at.
Does anyone know if there are any EU regulations on arcaheological standards and site H&S? The reason I ask is that increasingly I am getting narked at getting stick for doing work that would meet UK standards and have to knock out work which is frankly p*ss poor. (eg the standard of site photography is atrocious and yet I get aggro for producing well composed shots)
The H&S on my site/in my firm (mentioning no names of course) is laughable. eg no boots, hi-viz or hardhats with plant running about...my request for help holding the step ladder whilst I up it frequently results in raised eyebrows and low-level insults. Never any sort of H&S briefing either - yep I know that a lot of stuff on these briefings is common sense - don't eat the dirt etc - but newbies may be unaware that that seemingly old power cable is actually very alive and seriously upset their day if they put a spade through it.
Are there any EU regs that are actually useful to archaeology that I could quietly mention? I don't want to contact the local authorities to clarify this issue of standards as I fear that if that became known then I would have a black mark against me - even though I am trying to improve standards (well standards as I see them anyway)
Beer is your friend
Does anyone know if there are any EU regulations on arcaheological standards and site H&S? The reason I ask is that increasingly I am getting narked at getting stick for doing work that would meet UK standards and have to knock out work which is frankly p*ss poor. (eg the standard of site photography is atrocious and yet I get aggro for producing well composed shots)
The H&S on my site/in my firm (mentioning no names of course) is laughable. eg no boots, hi-viz or hardhats with plant running about...my request for help holding the step ladder whilst I up it frequently results in raised eyebrows and low-level insults. Never any sort of H&S briefing either - yep I know that a lot of stuff on these briefings is common sense - don't eat the dirt etc - but newbies may be unaware that that seemingly old power cable is actually very alive and seriously upset their day if they put a spade through it.
Are there any EU regs that are actually useful to archaeology that I could quietly mention? I don't want to contact the local authorities to clarify this issue of standards as I fear that if that became known then I would have a black mark against me - even though I am trying to improve standards (well standards as I see them anyway)
Beer is your friend
Belhaven is your friend