Make sure the shop that does the work is specifically set up to work on your specific engine--that means having the proper torque plates in stock.
Torque plates are made of heavy steel or aluminum, and mirror the bolt pattern of the cylinder head. When the heads are bolted to the block and torqued, the shape of the block is subtly altered. The plates mimic that effect. If you just bore a block free-standing, the holes are round until you bolt the heads on, at which point they become slightly un-round. This can lead to sealing problems down the road, ring fatigue, oil burning, loss of compression, and premature male pattern baldness. :laugh:
Boring the block with torque plates installed means that the hole is round, then when the plate is unbolted and removed, it goes un-round, then when the head is attached, the hole goes round again.
Torque plates are bloody expensive--on the order of $500 each or so, or thereabouts (there are aluminum ones on E-bay at the moment for $295), so not every engine shop will have them, particularly in a land where American V8s are rather thin on the ground.