Several of our American friends have posted here about the “industrial exemption”.
Let me be clear. This does not exist in Canada. In order to legally call oneself an engineer or any other title that may lead the public to believe that you are an engineer you MUST be registered as a professional engineer. Thus something like 90% of engineering school graduates are P.Eng’s (some never entered the field and some branched out into another field like law.) Most of the professors at engineering facilities are P.Eng’s.
The only exemptions are power engineers or boiler operators, train engineers or drivers or military engineers and then you have to be a member of the Canadian Armed Forces in an engineering capacity. To use the term engineer with any of these traditional exemptions one must use the full term i.e. power engineer.
While this is not always enforced it is the law.
Registration in Canada involves one of two methods. The first is a Bachelor’s degree from an accredited engineering school followed by 4 years work experience under the direction or mentorship of another engineer. The second is to write a series of exams (I believe 22 maximum) which is dependant on an assessment of your educational qualifications, followed by a period of 6 (I think) years experience. In both cases some of this experience must be North American.
Usually liability (also called errors and omissions ) insurance is only required for a practicing engineer who offers engineering services directly to the public. In Manitoba you are required by law to have $500,000 in order to get a permit to practice. In Saskatchewan the requirement is not based on insurance but on a review of ones experience and submission of references, similar to the initial registration but with higher thresholds. In Alberta the permit to practice only requires that one professional engineer assume responsibility for the ethical practice of the firm.
The insurance is held by the company, not the individual. The costs for the minimum depend on gross billings of the firm and for a one person company with a claim free history, you can expect to pay between $3,000 and $4,000 per year. (All amounts in $ CDN. $CDN=$US 0.65) This will vary greatly depending on your field of practice.
In Canada the profession is regulated by provincial associations. They each have their slightly different requirements but transferring registration is simple, easy and automatic. (For the personal registration not the corporate or permit to practice)
Enforcement of the various acts is left to the individual associations. In Manitoba with over 3,000 engineers and geoscientists there were around 10 complaints last year and none of these were refereed to the discipline committee for action. Past actions have resulted in short term (one week to six months) suspensions of licenses with perhaps a requirement for supervision for a short period after that. I have never personally heard of permanent revocations to practice.
In both of my associations (Saskatchewan and Manitoba) they spend less that 1% of total fee and other income on act enforcement. Individual registrations cost about $200 to $250 with small corporate registrations around the same.
While I have herd that failure to report unethical conduct is in itself considered unprofessional conduit, I have never heard of anyone being disciplined for it.
Some of the things that get short term suspensions should have, in my opinion, resulted in a permanent expulsion from the profession. (taking another engineers work, reissuing it with out changes or checking for applicability causing problems and serious financial issues, resulted in a six month suspension) These sort of things are not a simple error or lapse in judgment, they show a failure in character that should result in expulsion from the profession.
Rick Kitson MBA P.Eng
Construction Project Management
From conception to completion