"….Although it is recommended that the engineering experience be obtained while working under the supervision of a licensed professional engineer, this is not a requirement for licensure.."
"References - If not requesting exam waivers, five (5) references are required, of which, three (3) must be currently licensed P.E.'s. If requesting exam waivers, then nine (9) references are required with at least five (5) being currently licensed P.E.'s. The professional engineers can be licensed in any jurisdiction. The P.E. references not licensed in Texas must provide a copy of their current pocket card or other documentation to verify an active license.
Board Rule §131.71(b) allows for a reference who did not work with the applicant to review and judge the SER. An applicant might ask any of the references that are familiar with the applicant to review and judge the experience. The reference shall mark the appropriate box on the reference Statement (Character and Review of SER only for Purpose of Reference Statement).
Follow the instructions on the back of the reference statement to request your reference statements. Send a signed copy of your SER to those references that will verify your engineering experience."
I note that the PE who has not worked with you can provide a reference without jeapardizing their integrity. The form asks them clearly the basis of their opinion. They can state the limited context under which they know you and that their opinion of you work is based solely upon review of your own comments in the SER.
If someone submits 5 PE's who they have never worked with and asks for exam waiver... apparently they have met the minimum requirement. Even though the entire process would be based upon statement from the applicant themselves, statement non-licensed individuals working with the applicant who have no obligation to the board and cannot be punished by the board, and PE's who simply sign that based on review of the paper it looks good. One only hopes that the board would excercize some judgement beyond meeting those minimum requirements. Otherwise the PE system seems a worthless excercize IMHO.
Brainstorm:
Family reunion?
Internet?
Church, library, grocery store, McDonalds?
Sorry I couldn't resist that bit of sarcasm. It is directed at the system, not at you. I think that anyone is wise to take advantage of whatever opportunities are available and explore what are the minimum requirements.... minimum effort necessary to meet the goal of licensure. I would do the same thing myself.
So the question boils down to what is the minimum required:
1 - If none of the PE's need to have to have any direct knowledge of your work, than find anybody that has a PE and willing to review your application....maybe family reunion is not out of the question. Maybe someone on the board would like to volunteer.
2 - If PE board will excercize some judgement and disapprove an application full of people you haven't worked with, then you would need to figure out some way to interact in more work-related environment with PE's. Perhaps that might involve volunteering to work on a small project with a PE. Maybe your company has customers or suppliers that you interact with very closely who are PE's and therefore have some direct knowledge of your work.
Sounds like PE board is a good place to start to clarify whether you need option #1 or #2.