30th March 2016, 06:14 PM
(This post was last modified: 30th March 2016, 06:56 PM by Marc Berger.)
Hosty I am not trying to wind you up here. We work under the same crown (do we?) but different common laws, which makes things mud clear, maybe archaeologists should call these laws local customs or traditions. As you have said in Scotland the law is the law so even if you didn't tell your clients anything you would not be contravening any of the dictates of the IFA.(the one that says:In England, Wales, Northern Ireland and the Isle of Man ) not Scotland so you are not experiencing the compare and contrast by those who pay me for advice that the IFA have decided is supposed to be specified in a brief and WSI in the Republic of Lincolnshire.
I would like to learn a lot more about your system which the IFA does not seem to need to give instructions for. I particularly am interested in what an "Unclaimed certificate" looks like and all its administration as well what happens if a metal detectorist turns up will some gold but will not say where they found it. I am also interested in the Scottish museum Act of 84 and how ownership ist transferred from the Crown to the Museums as I see that they have the right to sell (although I am not as interested as I am in the 1964 Libraries and Museum Act but I imagine that theres a long way to go to get any significance out of that.
Beamo they don't let you have briefs. How do they let you or your client know anything and how they do they consider that fits in with the six tests of the NPPF. You say Worcestershire. I don't know it but I presume that its a two tier place I am really looking for briefs set by LPAs rather than any higher tiers to do with waste and infrastructure. Out of interest when you write your WSIs do your relate it to any specific paragraphs of the NPPF?
Hosty I was wondering that if after a few days of waiting to see if anybody could direct me to a brief with an ifa ownership clarity statement in it that I could ask for examples of briefs from around England, Wales, Northern Ireland and the Isle of Man if only to bring Northern Ireland into the frame as they are left out of the 1964 Act that I am interested in ((as well as Scotland) , I imagine they have their own Common law,) of recent briefs so that we could see what Prentice means by
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I would like to learn a lot more about your system which the IFA does not seem to need to give instructions for. I particularly am interested in what an "Unclaimed certificate" looks like and all its administration as well what happens if a metal detectorist turns up will some gold but will not say where they found it. I am also interested in the Scottish museum Act of 84 and how ownership ist transferred from the Crown to the Museums as I see that they have the right to sell (although I am not as interested as I am in the 1964 Libraries and Museum Act but I imagine that theres a long way to go to get any significance out of that.
Beamo they don't let you have briefs. How do they let you or your client know anything and how they do they consider that fits in with the six tests of the NPPF. You say Worcestershire. I don't know it but I presume that its a two tier place I am really looking for briefs set by LPAs rather than any higher tiers to do with waste and infrastructure. Out of interest when you write your WSIs do your relate it to any specific paragraphs of the NPPF?
Hosty I was wondering that if after a few days of waiting to see if anybody could direct me to a brief with an ifa ownership clarity statement in it that I could ask for examples of briefs from around England, Wales, Northern Ireland and the Isle of Man if only to bring Northern Ireland into the frame as they are left out of the 1964 Act that I am interested in ((as well as Scotland) , I imagine they have their own Common law,) of recent briefs so that we could see what Prentice means by
Quote:it is spectacularly missing from loads of lpa briefs and in fact is worded to imply that objects have to be deposited in a museum or planning conditions will not be discharged
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.....nature was dead and the past does not exist