zclarson82
Structural
- Apr 17, 2024
- 3
Hi everyone,
I work at a small structural engineering firm in Utah where we had only one licensed engineer who was a SE and the owner. The rest of us are EIT's, drafters, or secretaries. The principal engineer passed away unexpectedly two weeks ago leaving the company without a licensed engineer. The owner's wife is our secretary and is now the majority owner of the company.
I'm seeking any advice that I can get about how to best handle this situation. Hopefully we will be able to find somebody that we can hire that will step in and take over the company, but it doesn't seem very likely considering the liability and amount that we would be able to pay them. We are currently in discussions with another engineering firm who have offered to review all of our work and stamp things while we find a replacement for our principal. Some engineers in our state have advised us that we can't legally do that without a licensed engineer in our firm providing oversight while others say that there is no problem with that. Is this something that differs from state to state?
Our clients (understandably) have been requesting that we send them updated sets of plans, complete RFI's, and give general engineering advice. Without licenses, we are assuming that we can't legally do any of those things. We have been getting more and more pushback from clients who are concerned about the status of their projects, and for now all that we can tell them is that we are trying to figure it out as quickly as possible.
Any ideas, feedback, perspectives, or advice that you can offer are greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance!
I work at a small structural engineering firm in Utah where we had only one licensed engineer who was a SE and the owner. The rest of us are EIT's, drafters, or secretaries. The principal engineer passed away unexpectedly two weeks ago leaving the company without a licensed engineer. The owner's wife is our secretary and is now the majority owner of the company.
I'm seeking any advice that I can get about how to best handle this situation. Hopefully we will be able to find somebody that we can hire that will step in and take over the company, but it doesn't seem very likely considering the liability and amount that we would be able to pay them. We are currently in discussions with another engineering firm who have offered to review all of our work and stamp things while we find a replacement for our principal. Some engineers in our state have advised us that we can't legally do that without a licensed engineer in our firm providing oversight while others say that there is no problem with that. Is this something that differs from state to state?
Our clients (understandably) have been requesting that we send them updated sets of plans, complete RFI's, and give general engineering advice. Without licenses, we are assuming that we can't legally do any of those things. We have been getting more and more pushback from clients who are concerned about the status of their projects, and for now all that we can tell them is that we are trying to figure it out as quickly as possible.
Any ideas, feedback, perspectives, or advice that you can offer are greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance!