"Rural Knight" wrote in message link.net...
"basskisser" wrote in message
om...
"Rural Knight" wrote in message
news:6pLZa.11773
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 forgot one very important part of the very page that you seem to
have cut and pasted at will to make an arguement:
PRACTICING ENGINEERING IN THE STATE OF WASHINGTON AND ALL OTHER STATES
IN THE USA
To advertise and offer to practice engineering in all of the states in
the USA requires having an engineering license. To offer to practice
and then accept engineering jobs is against the law punishable as a
misdemeanor
It was not intentional by any stretch and I'm not arguing against you.
In fact, I thought to include it as it actually did bolster your argument,
but I didn't because I wasn't sure if that is just their rules and regs
or not.
I wonder if you can provide me with the Federal statute that governs
whether one can or can not call themselves "engineers".
I would appreciate that reference.
Later,
Tom
Tom, they are state statutes. I've given several here, if you'd like,
I'll post more.