November 23, 2013
November 12, 2013
The Texas Engineering License
Purpose and History (http://engineers.texas.gov/ lic.htm)
Photo: Ellie Goldberg, 2005 |
Purpose and History (http://engineers.texas.gov/
The Engineering Registration Act (Article 3271a, V.A.T.S.) was enacted as the result of a tragic school explosion at New London, Texas, in 1937. In response to concerns that the public could not identify who was qualified to practice engineering, the 45th Texas Legislature passed the Act as emergency legislation and it became law when signed by the Governor on May 28, 1937. The 59th Texas Legislature rewrote the original Registration Act. This Act became law on August 30, 1965, and was called the "Texas Engineering Practice Act."
The authors of the Texas Engineering Practice Act included the following statement in Section 1001.004 of the Act:
"The legislature recognizes the vital impact that the rapid advance of knowledge of the mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences as applied in the practice of engineering has on the lives, property, economy, and security of state residents and the national defense. The purpose of this chapter is to: protect the public health, safety, and welfare; enable the state and the public to identify persons authorized to practice engineering in this state; and fix responsibility for work done or services or acts performed in the practice of engineering. The legislature intends that: the privilege of practicing engineering be entrusted only to a person licensed and practicing under this chapter; only a person licensed under this chapter may: engage in the practice of engineering; be represented in any way as any kind of “engineer”; or make any professional use of the term “engineer”; and this chapter will be strictly complied with and enforced. This chapter shall be liberally construed to carry out the intent of the legislature."
It therefore becomes apparent that this legislation was not enacted to restrict the number of practitioners, but rather to "safeguard life, health, and property and protect the public welfare."
The Texas Board of Professional Engineers is authorized and required to license those individuals who are qualified by law to practice engineering, and to regulate the practice of engineering in Texas. To accomplish this mission, the Legislature further empowered the Board to make and enforce the rules dealing with licensing, compliance and enforcement, and standards of conduct and ethics.
November 11, 2013
Incident v. Impact: Why Leading a Safety Culture Matters 11/10/13
by SBI, safetyBUILT-IN (a division of SCInc.) is a safety-leadership learning and development company.
What do we think about safety and what do we believe about it? Is it a compliance policy that we follow and enforce, or is a culture that we live and lead? Here is an excerpt from our two-day safety-leadership workshop, “From Compliance to Culture,” that helps illustrate the difference.
The video relates a story I have often shared in my safety-leadership sessions to call attention to the abject deficiencies in how we tend to view safety in an organization.
Too often we speak of safety in the language of incidents rather than impact. The former allows us to distance ourselves too easily and too neatly from the full impact of what happens when someone gets injured or killed on the job.
But by reevaluating how we view safety and what we believe about it–especially in light of the impact an injury or death has on those who are left behind–we can begin to build and lead a safety culture in more effective ways. Watch the video below for the full explanation.
November 07, 2013
Forget green: Healthy buildings are the next big thing, SmartPlanet.org
No need to worry about health insurance. What people really need are healthier buildings.
No need to worry about health insurance. What people really need are healthier buildings.
And architects? Think of them as “upstream
doctors,” working to beat sickness and disease at their source, before people
are affected...
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