To Greg Locock,
Here is a true story that should make you feel comfortable.
I was passing in front of the kitchen table that a certain PE had the blue prints for a wastewater treatment plant he was designing layed out on.
I was looking over his shoulder and inquiring what municipality was letting out for bids a new wastewater treatment plant.
After he answered my question he picked up the phone and called one of his engineers and asked the following question?
"I thought we were going to use bleach for disinfection?"
I walked across the hall and picked up a gallon container of Clorox. I then went and placed it on his blue prints and pointed to the small print on the jug of chlorox:
"Ingredients: Sodium Hypochorite"
Next, I pointed to the phrase, Sodium Hypochlorite, printed on the blue prints next to the disinfection chamber.
Before the senior engineer on the other end of the phone had time to pull up his drawings, my in-law hung up the phone.
Here is my solution to all those Professional Civil Engineers who are designing wastewater treatment plants - With your PE stamp please guarantee your work in the form of a fine - for every pound of BOD, or ounze of TSS over the NPDES permit, you reimburse taxpayers!
Likewise, to drinking water treatment plant designers(PE) - if someone becomes ill due to the water, then you pay for the emergency room visit!
DO NOT POINT your finger at the WWTP operator.
If you were driving a high center of gravity SUV with tires that peel away, you wouldn't want the designer to point his finger at you - the operator?
Here is is my question to PE's - Why hasn't a single univeristy in this country started a degree program for - Water/Wastewater Engineering? Next, that engineer can then sit for his Water/Wastewater Professional Engineer license only after "operating" a drinking water and/or wasterwater treatment plant for 5 years. Not designing, but actually operating the plant - from mixing chemicals to backwashing sand filters to conducting routine lab tests - free chlorine residual, TSS, pH, etc.
When a Civil Engineer (PE) is designing a bridge during the morning, letting out a bid for repaving an asphalt road in the afternoon, and working on the design for a wastewater treatment plant in the evening, then I think it is quite obvious what the PE stands for - Plenty of Expertise (Master of None). PE also stands for "Paper Expert." On the lighter side how about "Phantom Engineer." It is an illusion, when a PE spends millions of tax payers dollars designing a wastewater treatment plant when he doesn't know how to "Treat" water!
The PE licensing system needs to closely reflect the engineers "true" expertise.
For example, when a 4th year medical student graduates he can use the title, MD - General Practitioner (GP). Next, he goes into an internship such as general surgery. He takes his boards and becomes a "Board Certified" general surgeon or "cutter". He my then move on to another internship - Cardiac Thoracic - and become a Board Certified Cardiac Thoracic Surgeon. He may receive a fellowship and truely specialize, for example, in heart transplants.
Engineering disciplines are too broad. Engineers need to specialize, for example, water treatment, then become an expert in that speciality and next sit before a board of water treatment experts (thumbs up or thumbs down)to become certified.
Then, the board certified water treatment engineer leaves bridge building to a board certified bridge engineer. Likewise, the certified bridge engineer is not just a structural engineer. He/she would be a structural engineer first who is a board certified bridge engineer.
Sincerely,
Todd
toddforet@usa.net