29th August 2012, 09:57 PM
haha archaeology a growth sector in the public sector dream on and it failed last time round and is still failing and yes any curator who thinks that county units are the answer is sorry tsmarsh not a very bright light. keep your eye on your pension and good luck.
Around my way currently I have two out of county charity units working, both got in predetermination eia work through mystierious tendering events which I have yet to find any transparancy for. and its all been sorted out without a single reference to me and several other "independant" archaeologists. Obviously I am not put out because this is the way it has always been.
Now the only thing that I could have done to get my card noticed in this situation is to have objected to the schemes at the consultation stage. And If I had objected to these schemes and my real main objection is that acces to the tender and I have objected in the past I would have been refered to the curator who would tell me that everything was under their control and ok and horse has bolted. If it was predetermination I probably would hit confidetiallity statements from the curators. If I was to object further I would have had to try and force a public enquiry which I have done in the past. My experience of all that is dont try and force a public enquiry on archaeological grounds because you will have the whole gang of them saying that everything was ok with the curator. (by this stage the curator will be called the "county archaeologist" and you will be called a member of the public) And of course everything is ok with the curator pension but it aint with mine.
Quote:Personally I would have no objection to a system where archaeology (re)turned towell I think that archaeological objection system within the planning procedure would lead to local knowledge and experience of archaeologists being valued by the developers and the planning authority. Why should they put any trust in advice that was not local particularly if you are going to be around next time and can point out the inconsistancies and previous presidents. As it is now so called local knowledge and experience is only asked of the curators, not the archaeologists. Thats what wrong with the system.
a system that meant that local knowledge, experience and expertise could be
fostered and developed;
Around my way currently I have two out of county charity units working, both got in predetermination eia work through mystierious tendering events which I have yet to find any transparancy for. and its all been sorted out without a single reference to me and several other "independant" archaeologists. Obviously I am not put out because this is the way it has always been.
Now the only thing that I could have done to get my card noticed in this situation is to have objected to the schemes at the consultation stage. And If I had objected to these schemes and my real main objection is that acces to the tender and I have objected in the past I would have been refered to the curator who would tell me that everything was under their control and ok and horse has bolted. If it was predetermination I probably would hit confidetiallity statements from the curators. If I was to object further I would have had to try and force a public enquiry which I have done in the past. My experience of all that is dont try and force a public enquiry on archaeological grounds because you will have the whole gang of them saying that everything was ok with the curator. (by this stage the curator will be called the "county archaeologist" and you will be called a member of the public) And of course everything is ok with the curator pension but it aint with mine.
Reason: your past is my past