LearnerN
Civil/Environmental
- Sep 9, 2010
- 102
I think it is no surprise to any of us in the oil/gas pipeline industry that some people may play "loose" with state or other non-federal legislation and ignore it as having any authority or relevance so long as you're basically following the CFR's and ASME and industry standards. In terms of professional engineering licensure, some engineers may practice engineering in states in which they don't have a license, and they haven't even read the licensure law pertaining to what is required of any engineering in that state. Further, some (or maybe all) states have specific regulations regulating the pipeline industry itself in their state.
So my understanding is that if an engineer desires to practice any engineering in some state, he must: (1) ensure his company is approved to practice engineering in that state, (2) obtain a PE license to practice in that state unless another engineer in the company - who is licensed in that state - directly oversees the work, (3) ensure the professional engineering regulations are followed in terms of what needs stamped, when, etc, (4) determine if there are any state codes/legislation regulating that field of engineering the engineer desires to practice in that state. These are obligations above and beyond the duty of designing in accordance with the CFRs, ASME and other industry standards, as well as good engineering judgment.
First question: is what I've said above accurate? Anything else that you'd add or otherwise?
Second question: how would an engineer go about determining what all possible legislation in a state (or other jurisdiction) would apply to the type of engineering he hopes/plans to practice in that state? Call some state government office to find out who he should talk to about this inquiry and to find out what all legislation would apply? This seems like such a common sense topic, but sadly this is not an approach I think is being taught well to engineers these days (but it obviously totally depends on the industry and type of engineering and state you're practicing in). Thank you, everyone.
So my understanding is that if an engineer desires to practice any engineering in some state, he must: (1) ensure his company is approved to practice engineering in that state, (2) obtain a PE license to practice in that state unless another engineer in the company - who is licensed in that state - directly oversees the work, (3) ensure the professional engineering regulations are followed in terms of what needs stamped, when, etc, (4) determine if there are any state codes/legislation regulating that field of engineering the engineer desires to practice in that state. These are obligations above and beyond the duty of designing in accordance with the CFRs, ASME and other industry standards, as well as good engineering judgment.
First question: is what I've said above accurate? Anything else that you'd add or otherwise?
Second question: how would an engineer go about determining what all possible legislation in a state (or other jurisdiction) would apply to the type of engineering he hopes/plans to practice in that state? Call some state government office to find out who he should talk to about this inquiry and to find out what all legislation would apply? This seems like such a common sense topic, but sadly this is not an approach I think is being taught well to engineers these days (but it obviously totally depends on the industry and type of engineering and state you're practicing in). Thank you, everyone.