27th June 2008, 04:00 PM
To quote Peter Hinton at the 2004 AGM
This could of course mean that the IFA are only able to enforce standards on members.. which would mean that...er... as you can (like me) step away from the IFA, then I am no longer open to any form of enforcement other than from the Curator....which I was anyway.
and to quote a post last year from one man
http://www.bajr.org/BAJRforum/topic.asp?...hichpage=2
Policing only works if you police everyone... and the only people able to do that (at the moment) are Curators.
:face-huh:
"No job worth doing was ever done on time or under budget.."
Khufu
Quote:quote:
#8226; we need agreed and enforceable high standards
#8226; we need to have those standards insisted upon by curators and national bodies if organisations are to continue to win contracts (#8216;quality-based barriers to entry#8217
This could of course mean that the IFA are only able to enforce standards on members.. which would mean that...er... as you can (like me) step away from the IFA, then I am no longer open to any form of enforcement other than from the Curator....which I was anyway.
and to quote a post last year from one man
http://www.bajr.org/BAJRforum/topic.asp?...hichpage=2
Quote:quote:I can't see how the IFA would ever have the resources to conduct this sort of review role - there are hundreds (thoussands?) of such reports produced every year, and they only have a few staff, all busy doing other things. Also, why would a unit that isn't an RAO, or an archaeologist who isn't a member, pay any attention?
As I see it, the role of the IFA is to establish national standards (and, secondarily, to act as a 'court' for dealing with complaints about members/RAOs).
Irrespective of what the IFA does, it is already the responsibility of curators to police the standard of archaeological work done under PPG16 (ie most work in England), and in part they are supposed to do that by checking the quality of reports. The standards set by the IFA give the curators a tool to make that task easier, in that they have a consistent standard to measure quality against, and that they can quote as a requirement in WSIs. Because their remit covers all PPG16 work, their reach for policing purposes is wider than that of the IFA (which, even if it could do active policing, could only police its own members)
Policing only works if you police everyone... and the only people able to do that (at the moment) are Curators.
:face-huh:
"No job worth doing was ever done on time or under budget.."
Khufu