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You are a landowner who has done every thing that you should to protect any potential archaeology and cuddly living things on your land. One day a representative of a developer with potential powers of compulsory purchase wishing to construct a pipeline, road scheme or runway appears on your doorstep accompanied by an environment manager. What should you do as a landowner.
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"Should" is an interesting word. Do you mean morally, legally or in your own financial best interests?
I'm interested in finding out whether there actually is anything you could do in that situation -anything that doesn't involve a loaded shotgun and a 5-10 stretch in the slammer, I mean (I don't have a violent nature, it's just that a relative is a famer and I'm imagining his response).
You could present your visitors with documentary evidence of your nationally important archaeology and details of your wonderful ecology (copies only, of course) in the hope of scaring them off. But I think by the "visiting" stage, that would just provide advance notice for their lawyers to start building a case to counter any legal objection that you launch (if you can afford to). I think I'd keep stumm, apart from saying something vague about your Grandad digging up a Roman pot/bit of wall in yonder field and your youngest bringing home a jamjar filled with Great Crested Newts, and see what the visitors' response is. Then as soon as they've gone, get on the phone/email to whatever concerned conservation organisations you can find and lawyer-up. Ultimately, if you lose an appeal, compulsory purchase means just that. They swipe your carefully conserved land/archaeology/fluffy bunny orphanage and bulldoze the lot, having shelled out as little as possible to investigate the remains and wehome the wabbits.
Or you could just accept the cheque with a smile. Although I'm guessing this isn't what you "should" do!
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Take the money !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:face-stir::face-stir:
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Take the money !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:face-stir::face-stir:
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open te box....
but seriously... the morl obligation is often used, but does it cut ice when you have something to lose.
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The majority of land owners I've talked to over the years think archaeology is c**p and a total waste of their money. Always satisfying knowing that your carefully crafted report is going to be filed directly into the bin once the planning condition has been signed-off.....:face-crying:
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Quote:
[SIZE=3]I'm interested in finding out whether there actually is anything you could do in that situation
[/SIZE]
Could ask for confidentiality
Could ask for copyright
Could allow access to the developer but refuse access to the environmental manager.
Could ask for representation from independent archaeologists
Could ask for compensation for any archaeology undertaken.