20th June 2014, 05:21 PM
Yes but it kinda twisted about a bit. Currently After looking at the PIMS document and back engineering the reality of all these documents submitted with planning applications are mostly there to go to appeals and inquiries if an appeal occurs, therefore if you are working for a client you should try and give them the strongest hand for that situation.
I am toying with the idea that if anybody asks for a heritage statement that the clients archaeologist should undertake some form of field evaluation, if only so that at any possible appeal that the real field archaeologist gets to sit in front of an inspector and question the archaeological field credentials of anybody wanting to talk about heritage assets and significance based on tenuous and not so nearby HER data and explain what connection there is between field archaeology results and heritage statements. Without dirty fingernails the curators and eh inspectors will run rings around any digger using devious interactions of the heritage receptors. What I am also wondering is if you have done an evaluation that you don't have to do a heritage statement and a desk based assessment...
I am toying with the idea that if anybody asks for a heritage statement that the clients archaeologist should undertake some form of field evaluation, if only so that at any possible appeal that the real field archaeologist gets to sit in front of an inspector and question the archaeological field credentials of anybody wanting to talk about heritage assets and significance based on tenuous and not so nearby HER data and explain what connection there is between field archaeology results and heritage statements. Without dirty fingernails the curators and eh inspectors will run rings around any digger using devious interactions of the heritage receptors. What I am also wondering is if you have done an evaluation that you don't have to do a heritage statement and a desk based assessment...
.....nature was dead and the past does not exist