BCSteeze
Civil/Environmental
- Apr 16, 2015
- 3
I have worked at three firms now and at all three the unlicensed junior employees have been required to occasionally sign and seal documents on behalf of the only PE at the firm (small 3-15 person firms with the 1 PE who is the owner). This generally occurred when the PE was out of the office, either in the field, sick, or on vacation, and plans needed to be filed due to time constraints.
In most cases major design elements were reviewed by the PE during earlier stages of the project, but prior to final revisions which may have included minor design changes. In other cases the plans were reviewed exclusively by unlicensed senior engineers (15+ years of experience). In any case I believe the submitted designs were in compliance with all applicable codes and were in no way sub-par, but I am of course unlicensed.
I've always felt uneasy about this practice even with express permission from the PE to 'sign and seal on my behalf' and always insisted to not be personally required to do so. However, that doesn't mean the guy at the next desk has the same convictions, and ultimately I am working at a firm which has this as part of standard procedures.
OK. Questions:
Is signing and sealing on behalf of a PE a major ethics violation?
Is there ever a situation where signing and sealing on behalf of the PE is warranted?
Is this 'standard practice' in the industry?
Is this simply a symptom of working at small firms?
Is physically signing my bosses name and using his stamp any different than including a digital version of a signed stamp in a drawing?
Thank you for your thoughts in advance.
In most cases major design elements were reviewed by the PE during earlier stages of the project, but prior to final revisions which may have included minor design changes. In other cases the plans were reviewed exclusively by unlicensed senior engineers (15+ years of experience). In any case I believe the submitted designs were in compliance with all applicable codes and were in no way sub-par, but I am of course unlicensed.
I've always felt uneasy about this practice even with express permission from the PE to 'sign and seal on my behalf' and always insisted to not be personally required to do so. However, that doesn't mean the guy at the next desk has the same convictions, and ultimately I am working at a firm which has this as part of standard procedures.
OK. Questions:
Is signing and sealing on behalf of a PE a major ethics violation?
Is there ever a situation where signing and sealing on behalf of the PE is warranted?
Is this 'standard practice' in the industry?
Is this simply a symptom of working at small firms?
Is physically signing my bosses name and using his stamp any different than including a digital version of a signed stamp in a drawing?
Thank you for your thoughts in advance.