Wax Wrote:Round here one local Government set up has got rid of their County archeaologist so who knows where the planners will be getting their archeaological advice ( if any).
There's also one Scottish council where the HER is maintained by a planning assistant with (so far as I'm aware) no archaeological experience. When a planner thinks that there may be an archaeological issue, they pay for a commercial consultant to provide the archaeological advice. The problem with this is that it relies on the judgement of the planner to determine that there's an issue and that they need archaeological input, the consultant is unable to independently identify or raise issues. From the outside, it seems that the planners are either:
a) adopting a far too simplistic approach to identifying potential issues, ie, if there's not a 'dot-on-the-map' indicating a site within the development area, then there's no issue (leaving aside the fact that each 'dot' may represent an extensive site, the fact that a lot of 'dots' in the surrounding landscape may indicate the potential presence of additional sites within the application area, and that those 'dots' only represent previously-recorded sites, with the possibility that further material may exist below ground level),
b) that the planners don't really understand archaeology and would prefer to ignore the issue, so don't get the consultant involved for the sake of avoiding complications or
c) that they've been instructed not to get the consultant involved too often, as each time they do, it costs money.
Whatever the reason, the result is that there appears to have been very little development control work done in this Council area over the last couple of years, and that which has taken place appears to be a legacy of the previous regime (work which already had planning consent with an archaeological condition attached).
This is not a criticism of the consultancy involved - they're only able to work within the constraints of their contract with the Council, and it's probably better to have this minimal level of service than nothing at all. If you were to ask the Council concerned, however, they'd doubtless say that they consider that they're dealing with archaeology correctly, citing the fact that they have someone maintaining a HER and have access to specialist advice. However, the devil is in the detail of how these two elements fit together - if the person maintaining the HER is purely responsible for the record with no requirement to interpret it and provide specialist advice, then the consultant is rarely involved, and so seldom has the opportunity to ask for work.