Site Memo versions and withdrawals
A Site Memo is a dated, source-cited view of a property. When the evidence changes or the work is revised, you may see more than one version.Version history
Open a Site Memo and scroll to Version history.- If there is only one generated version, the workspace says so plainly.
- If there are several, the list shows the version number, creation date, and the displayed feasibility score where available.
- Select a version to view that specific edition.
How to read a changed score
A different displayed score across versions is a signal to inspect the evidence and findings behind that edition. It is not a magical percentage of approval, and it should not be used as one. A score must be read with the cited record, the current deal stage, and the unresolved questions. Monitoring can surface new evidence, but it does not manufacture certainty.What a withdrawal means
In the unusual event that a published memo is withdrawn, it is intentionally no longer available as a normal buyer-facing report. Treat the previous memo as superseded—not as a conveniently permanent answer that can be forwarded forever. A withdrawal does not erase the need to make a decision. It tells you the prior customer-facing edition should not be relied upon while the underlying position is clarified.What to do when a memo changes or disappears
- Open the current Site Memo and review its version history.
- Check recent Monitoring or Scout notices for new public-record evidence.
- Re-read the cited sources and known unknowns that bear on the changed point.
- Tell internal reviewers and counsel which version is current.
- For material deal decisions, get the relevant legal, engineering, environmental, title, or lending advice.

