19th August 2008, 09:08 PM
Quote:quote:Originally posted by drpeterwardle
I actually think UnitofOne has a point when he says:
"You might try to cheat me, isnât that why we need a consultant."
I agree with that yes that why even on very small jobs a consultant and a contract is needed. As things stand anybody can set themselves up as an archaeologist without qualifications, competance and/or experience let alone insurance etc.
The cost of a one day watching brief is often disproportionate to the work and this is the kind of thing a consultant can sort out. Similarly in any watching brief situation there is the potential for it to turn into a much bigger project.
However the ICE contract is a bit formal for a small project so what I do is refer to it in the letter of instruction. ICE is clearly geared around the larger excavation projects and I would like to see versions for watching briefs and evaluations.
Peter
Well, at the risk of sounding glib; you, as a consultant would say that. There seems to be an an assumption on your part that clients need to be protected from the demonic predatory nature of archaeological contractors by consultancy angels such as yourself.
Could you give examples where clients have been blatantly overcharged for WBs and evals?