5th March 2009, 09:50 AM
IfA Recession Seminar: priorities for further action
Those present agreed that the following should be recognised as priorities:
1. to ensure that redundancies are necessary through careful review within organisations, taking advice where needed
2. to retain skills as far as possible, in the understanding that those with best skills will be better positioned to respond when the situation improves
3. to investigate further what skills the sector as a whole will have, and what it will need at upturn
4. to ensure that recruitment standards are not lowered once the market picks up ? rather that the value of proper skills be rewarded
5. to make the link between the planning process and quality/standards
6. to communicate public/social value of archaeology to those outside the profession
7. to create or support a new structure for the market for the future
8. to ensure that the PPS has teeth ? grounded in precedent, and with strong enforcement (including the possibility of more frequent use of S.106s)
9. to ensure funding for PX, especially where SPVs are involved, perhaps through up front payment ? through dialogue with the planning community
10. for all to make commitments not to undermine our own market by dropping prices, and place greater value on quality
11. to pursue the need for better model conditions
12. to ensure that organisations have sustainable business strategies
13. to look at and improve commercial risk management processes within businesses
14. to ensure the structure of the future market by defining market for each business clearly
15. to make more decisions based on the quality, not quantity of archaeological work that?s achievable through the planning process
16. to understand our market better, through the advice and expertise of those outside it and within the he sector as a whole
17. to make the pitch for archaeology in new terms ? terms that reflect current priorities and agenda
?When a sinister person means to be your enemy, they always start by trying to become your friend.?
William Blake
Those present agreed that the following should be recognised as priorities:
1. to ensure that redundancies are necessary through careful review within organisations, taking advice where needed
2. to retain skills as far as possible, in the understanding that those with best skills will be better positioned to respond when the situation improves
3. to investigate further what skills the sector as a whole will have, and what it will need at upturn
4. to ensure that recruitment standards are not lowered once the market picks up ? rather that the value of proper skills be rewarded
5. to make the link between the planning process and quality/standards
6. to communicate public/social value of archaeology to those outside the profession
7. to create or support a new structure for the market for the future
8. to ensure that the PPS has teeth ? grounded in precedent, and with strong enforcement (including the possibility of more frequent use of S.106s)
9. to ensure funding for PX, especially where SPVs are involved, perhaps through up front payment ? through dialogue with the planning community
10. for all to make commitments not to undermine our own market by dropping prices, and place greater value on quality
11. to pursue the need for better model conditions
12. to ensure that organisations have sustainable business strategies
13. to look at and improve commercial risk management processes within businesses
14. to ensure the structure of the future market by defining market for each business clearly
15. to make more decisions based on the quality, not quantity of archaeological work that?s achievable through the planning process
16. to understand our market better, through the advice and expertise of those outside it and within the he sector as a whole
17. to make the pitch for archaeology in new terms ? terms that reflect current priorities and agenda
?When a sinister person means to be your enemy, they always start by trying to become your friend.?
William Blake
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