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![]() "basskisser" wrote in message om... "Rural Knight" wrote in message hlink.net... "basskisser" wrote in message om... "Joe" wrote in message ... And I like to do Crown Moulding and upgrades to homes and condos. Bill Practicing coping without a P.E license? Wait till asskisser hears about this! Idiot reply. I said you can't legally practice engineering without a license. Prove me wrong. OFTEN ASKED QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS COVERING ENGINEERING PRACTICE Q. Do I need a license to practice engineering is a corporation such as Boeing? A. No. There is an Industrial Exemption that allows engineers to work without a license with the assumption that the Corporation has a licensed engineer responsible for all engineering done in the name of the firm. Q. Can I legally do engineering work without a license in a firm that does not have a licensed engineer? A. Yes. But, your work will not be accepted by any government agency that requires that a licensed engineer stamp all documents. Here is the reference: http://www.pseconline.org/Registration/ And that is pretty typical of most states. You can NOT call yourself an engineer, have "engineer" in the name of your company, etc. unless you are licensed to practice engineering in that particular state, and like you've said, most states are typical. Ok, so here is a question for you. Let's say I have an engineering degree (M.E), Masters - Applied Materials Science and a PhD in Mathematics - I cannot be an engineer unless I pass some sort of license and/or professional practicum governed by either the state or peer review? Or let's take this case - I graduate from MIT as a ME, I am hired as an ME, I work as for the company as an ME and I cannot call myself an ME unless the state or professional organization recognizes me as such? The key to your example, is that the FIRM needs to have a licensed engineer on staff. The rest, are designers. If you take the whole picture into context, it changes. If you take just the parts that you've snipped, then there would never be a need for anybody to be a licensed professional engineer. I recognize the need for professional engineers - my argument is with the term engineer. One cannot be something unless one is something. My argument is that one can be an engineer even if it is at a junior or precept level. To wit: If I give a design project to a junior engineer and I observe, review and approve his resulting efforts, is that junior engineer not an engineer? Later, Tom |
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