OWG
While 50% of graduates of an engineering school may not be P.Eng’s, they are NOT engineers unless they are registered with their local association.
Having an engineering degree does not make you an engineer in Canada. Practicing engineering does not make you an engineer in Canada. The ONLY way to be an engineer in Canada is to be a member of one of the professional associations. That is the wording of the various engineering acts. You may disagree with this statement, you may disagree as to whether or not this should be the law, but this is the position that the Manitoba association has taken on more than one occasion. I personally fully support this position.
If you or someone you know is practicing engineering and is not a member of the association then this is in contravention of the law.
You are required both as a matter of law and of professional ethics (which as a member of the association you are required by law to follow) to report this to the proper authorities, in your case the PEO.
phillyboy
The reciprocity agreements between Canada and the US are practically meaningless. The associations in both Canada and the US do not respect the terms of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NFTA). This requires that there be mobility of professional manpower and reciprocity in professional licensing. As far as I know, only Texas will accept my Canadian license and then the Texas license is not transferable to other states.
In Canada getting a personal license in another province is simply a matter of applying. Acceptance is automatic after the receiving association verifies registration in the home province. (I have had registration in three different provinces, currently registered in two.) When I applied in Alberta, my acceptance letter was faxed to me within two weeks of mailing my application.
Does anyone have any experience in transferring licenses internationally?
Is there any state that will accept me without a long drawn out application process? (24 years as a P.Eng and graduate of an accredited university) Will this license then be transferable to any of the other 49 states?
gittings00
If licensure was universally required then you would have worked in proximity to other professional engineers and therefore had the necessary references.
In Canada, licensure is a provincial matter, the federal government is not bound by the laws of the province. Therefore federal civil service engineers are not required to be licensed, however virtually 100% of the ones that I worked with were. (myself included for the first 15 years). There is also a specific exemption (at least in Manitoba) for military engineers while on active duty with the Canadian Armed Forces. There registration is also almost 100% of qualified personnel. (12 of my 15 years of government service was as a civilian employee of DND)
Rick Kitson MBA P.Eng
Construction Project Management
From conception to completion