14th August 2015, 12:42 PM
Dinosaur Wrote:there are jobs where you're effectively consultant, contractor and curator all in one since you're the only archaeologist involved in the entire process, and everyone else pretty much has to go along with what you say...has been going on for years, if they don't get it sorted soon someone is eventually going to ask what the county service is actually for
So in that situation, how do archaeological conditions end up on planning decisions? Do the planners do it unilaterally, or do they have constraint maps? Seems like a rum way of doing things to me.