ENG16080 said:
While a mandatory peer review system as described above would be great if it could be accomplished without being a detriment to our fees and schedules, I don't think it's very likely to happen.
I contend that this is simply a flawed way to think about this. The mandatory peer review
will add cost to projects and time to schedules. And those costs, nominal as they are, would be born by the consumer (building occupant) and, ultimately, by society. This is just economics and is little different from when the price of an iPhone has to go up a bit because there's a conflict in Zimbabwe driving up the cost of Adamantium. Apple simply passes that along. Once the system adjusts to its new equilibrium, I see no reason to expect that our fees and schedules would not adjust accordingly. Yeah, there will be some interim pain. But if you want to make an omelette...
This all, pessimistically, assumes that a better structural product would yield no downstream cost savings to the project.
eng16080 said:
If there was a powerful organization that was actually looking out for the profession and could lobby for our better interests, I think then something like this could succeed.
I feel that the necessary infrastructure already exists. Consider this hypothetical:
1) Nowadays, pretty much every jurisdiction in North America has some kind of structural engineer's association.
2) Imagine that we practicing engineers communicate to our regional SEA's that we want this addressed.
3) Next, our regional SEA's decide that, as a reflection of our wishes, they too want this addressed.
4) The body that oversees the regionals prepares a position paper to share with the AHJ's (and public if need be). The position paper says this:
a) We think there's a problem with existing system and this is what we think it is. There are public safety implications.
b) We've developed a solution to address the problem that is a good deal more rigorous that what is currently being done.
c) We would like to work collaboratively with AHJ to bring this solution about.
5) The AHJs buy in and help us do this thing.
Does that really sound so far fetched? Do we really feel that the AJH's would just tell us to get lost because the present system is kicking ass and taking names?
I feel this would be a bit like one of your kids coming to you and saying "I'd really like to learn more calculus than we're covering at school Dad. Could you help me line up a tutor?"
Hell yeah we'll help you line up a tutor! Kudos for actually giving a shit.
eng16010 said:
Does the general public or these AHJs think structural engineers as a whole are producing low quality work and that a systematic change is needed?
No, they don't. And this is precisely why we need to be proactive about this rather than just passively letting this stuff "happen" to us. For most of our profession's history, we've landed somewhere between resenting/resisting AHJ review and being ambivalent to it as a "necessary evil".
That's how we got the system that we currently have and do not love. If we're going to have a good system that can support good structural engineers then we're going to have to lead on this rather than follow. We're going to have to show that
we give a shit. We need to be the champions of a regulated, peer review process rather than the victims of it.