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I find this most interesting. As a P.E. licensed by the state of Oregon
(since 1981), I'm aware that I'm subject to state laws governing the code of conduct of Professional Engineers, and all other applicable state laws. I didn't realize that I had legal obligations to NIST, or that any other federal agency has requirements for P.E.s of all states. Would you please provide some reference where I can further research this obligation and the rules it has imposed that I'm legally required to comply with? Roy Lewallen, W7EL, P.E. Richard Clark wrote: . . . Strictly speaking from the point of legality, it is demanded of Professional Engineers by the National Institutes of Science and Technology (what was called the National Bureau of Standards or NBS years ago). This means that ANY P.E. that describes a physical relation that does not conform to these scientific concepts, and damage results to that Professional Engineer's customer, then that P.E. is liable in a court of law. This form of legality is the whole point of being P.E.s and the government making the demand that P.E.s be part of describing engineering codes and performing design review. . . . |
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