There is some information above that really needs to be taken with a pound or two of salt.
When I got my P.E. I was working for a major Oil & Gas company and the day after I found out I passed the test I got an all-expense paid trip to Houston to have a talk with Legal. What they told me was scary:
[ul]
[li]If I stamped something for the company, if I'm sued the company is prohibited by law from providing counsel or from participating in my case in any way (including requiring me to take vacation to attend depositions or trials)[/li]
[li]The company could not provide me with insurance[/li]
[li]The company would not change my pay scale because of the P.E.[/li]
[li]They could not give me legal advice, but they said that if it were them, they would lock up the P.E. stamp in an offsite safe and not pull it out until after retirement.[/li]
[/ul]
This was a company that did not hold itself out to the public as an engineering firm. The rules are different for consulting engineering firms, but you need to make ABSOLUTELY CERTAIN that your name is on your employers policy before you stamp anything. Your name. Not "and employees as directed".
As to retroactive insurance. Let's say you had Allstate insurance on your vehicle in 2012 and had an accident that was settled and paid for. At the end of 2012 you changed to State Farm. In 2018 you had a problem with your car that the shop said was absolutely caused by the 2012 accident, and the repairs done in 2012 just missed it (no negligence). Would you expect a claim to Allstate (without a current policy number) to get a favorable response? E&O policies are the same way, they are only in force while premiums are paid in full. That is why I've never shopped for less expensive policies. If a job I did in 2015 ends up in court, then (since the policy I currently have was the one that was in force in 2015) my insurance carrier would be liable up to the limits of the policy. If I had changed carriers after 2015, I'd be on my own.
[bold]David Simpson, PE[/bold]
MuleShoe Engineering
In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual. Galileo Galilei, Italian Physicist