5th September 2007, 08:08 PM
Improving Archaeologistsâ Pay
In April 2007, the IFA introduced an expanded set of minimum pay recommendations, recognising the fact that pay is only one part of the total employment package and setting minimum standards for working time, holiday and sick pay, and employer pension contributions.
The new pay minima, which are binding on RAOs, are an important step forward but are still based on minimum salary levels which do not compare well with those in other professions. In order to raise minimum pay levels, a robust methodology is needed to allow reliable comparisons to be drawn with salaries in related professions, leading to pay minima which reflect more accurately the qualifications, skills and experience of professional archaeologists.
In order to move this issue forward, the IFA has employed a consultant to facilitate the process of âbenchmarkingâ archaeological salaries against those in other industries.
Frank Price is an experienced human resources consultant with a background advising on job evaluation schemes (amongst other things) at the Conciliation Service ACAS. He will oversee the process and provide independent expert advice to a Project Advisory Board and Working Group comprising representatives of a wide cross section of different interests including the IFA RAO and Working Practices committees and Finds Group, SCAUM, Prospect, BAJR and the Diggersâ Forum.
Over the coming months, the working group will be identifying a range of archaeological posts to use as comparators and gathering data on salaries and entry requirements for them. These âbenchmarkâ posts will then be assessed using job evaluation techniques so that they can be compared objectively to similar posts in other professions. The sectors currently being considered as comparable are engineering, planning, environmental management, other areas of the heritage sector, surveying and architecture although others may be suggested along the way. The information from this comparison will be used to inform future revisions to the IFA minimum salaries. If, as we suspect, the results indicate that archaeologistsâ qualifications and skills are not being reflected accurately in their pay, significant increases in the IFA minimum salary levels will be subject to extensive consultation and staged over a number of years.
The timetable for the project is to complete data gathering over the summer and analysis in September, with the aim of reporting preliminary results at the IFA AGM on October 1.
Other initiatives on pay and conditions like the Diggersâ Forum Campaign for a Living Wage, SCAUMâs recently published statement of good practice and the revised BAJR pay levels are increasingly putting pressure on the archaeological sector to deal with the issue of pay. Although there are many factors contributing to low pay, we are confident that real progress will have been made before the 2008/9 pay minima are announced next year.
BAJR Note:
You can be assured that I am working with everyone on this and we are all pushing the same way... this is really happening, and is happening right now... we are all putting in a lot of time, effort and work... I was yesterday at another meeting in London... up at 5am.. back at midnight... just so we can drive it forward... this is looking good... so hold tight!
"No job worth doing was ever done on time or under budget.."
Khufu
In April 2007, the IFA introduced an expanded set of minimum pay recommendations, recognising the fact that pay is only one part of the total employment package and setting minimum standards for working time, holiday and sick pay, and employer pension contributions.
The new pay minima, which are binding on RAOs, are an important step forward but are still based on minimum salary levels which do not compare well with those in other professions. In order to raise minimum pay levels, a robust methodology is needed to allow reliable comparisons to be drawn with salaries in related professions, leading to pay minima which reflect more accurately the qualifications, skills and experience of professional archaeologists.
In order to move this issue forward, the IFA has employed a consultant to facilitate the process of âbenchmarkingâ archaeological salaries against those in other industries.
Frank Price is an experienced human resources consultant with a background advising on job evaluation schemes (amongst other things) at the Conciliation Service ACAS. He will oversee the process and provide independent expert advice to a Project Advisory Board and Working Group comprising representatives of a wide cross section of different interests including the IFA RAO and Working Practices committees and Finds Group, SCAUM, Prospect, BAJR and the Diggersâ Forum.
Over the coming months, the working group will be identifying a range of archaeological posts to use as comparators and gathering data on salaries and entry requirements for them. These âbenchmarkâ posts will then be assessed using job evaluation techniques so that they can be compared objectively to similar posts in other professions. The sectors currently being considered as comparable are engineering, planning, environmental management, other areas of the heritage sector, surveying and architecture although others may be suggested along the way. The information from this comparison will be used to inform future revisions to the IFA minimum salaries. If, as we suspect, the results indicate that archaeologistsâ qualifications and skills are not being reflected accurately in their pay, significant increases in the IFA minimum salary levels will be subject to extensive consultation and staged over a number of years.
The timetable for the project is to complete data gathering over the summer and analysis in September, with the aim of reporting preliminary results at the IFA AGM on October 1.
Other initiatives on pay and conditions like the Diggersâ Forum Campaign for a Living Wage, SCAUMâs recently published statement of good practice and the revised BAJR pay levels are increasingly putting pressure on the archaeological sector to deal with the issue of pay. Although there are many factors contributing to low pay, we are confident that real progress will have been made before the 2008/9 pay minima are announced next year.
BAJR Note:
You can be assured that I am working with everyone on this and we are all pushing the same way... this is really happening, and is happening right now... we are all putting in a lot of time, effort and work... I was yesterday at another meeting in London... up at 5am.. back at midnight... just so we can drive it forward... this is looking good... so hold tight!
"No job worth doing was ever done on time or under budget.."
Khufu
For really I think that the poorest he that is in England hath a life to live, as the greatest he
Thomas Rainborough 1647
Thomas Rainborough 1647