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Preamble
Consulting
engineering is an important and learned profession. The members of the profession
recognize that their work has a direct and vital impact on the quality of life for all
people. Accordingly, the services provided by consulting engineers require honesty,
impartiality, fairness and equity and must be dedicated to the protection of public
health, safety and welfare. In the practice of their profession, consulting engineers must
perform under a standard of professional behavior which requires adherence to the highest
principles of ethical conduct on behalf of the public, clients, employees and the
profession.
I. Fundamental Canons
Consulting
engineers, in the fulfillment of their professional duties, shall:
- Hold paramount the safety, health and welfare of the public in the performance of their
professional duties.
- Perform services only in areas of competence.
- Issue public statements only in an objective and truthful manner.
- Act in professional matters for each client as faithful agents or trustees.
- Avoid improper solicitation of professional assignments.
II. Rules of Practice
l.
Consulting engineers shall hold paramount the safety, health and welfare of the public in
the performance of their professional duties.
- Consulting engineers shall at all times recognize that their primary obligation
is to protect the safety, health, property and welfare of the public. If their
professional judgment is overruled under circumstances where the safety, health, property
or welfare of the public are endangered, they shall notify their client and such other
authority as may be appropriate.
- Consulting engineers shall approve only engineering work which, to the best of their
knowledge and belief, is safe for public health, property and welfare and in conformity
with accepted standards.
- Consulting engineers shall not reveal facts, data or information obtained in a
professional capacity without the prior consent of the client except as authorized or
required by law or these Guidelines.
- Consulting engineers shall not permit the use of their name or firm nor associate in
business ventures with any person or firm which they have reason to believe is engaging in
fraudulent or dishonest business or professional practices.
- Consulting engineers having knowledge of any alleged violation of the Guidelines shall
cooperate with the proper authorities in furnishing such information or assistance as may
be required.
2. Consulting engineers shall perform services only in the areas of their competence.
- Consulting engineers shall undertake assignments only when qualified by
education or experience in the specific technical fields involved.
- Consulting engineers shall not affix their signatures to any plan or documents dealing
with subject matter in which they lack competence nor to any plan or document not prepared
under their direction and control.
- Consulting engineers may accept an assignment outside of their fields of competence to
the extent that their services are restricted to those phases of the project in which they
are qualified and to the extent that they are satisfied that all other phases of such
project will be performed by registered or otherwise qualified associates, consultants or
employees, in which case they may then sign the documents for the total project.
3. Consulting engineers shall issue public statements only in an objective and truthful
manner.
- Consulting engineers shall be objective and truthful in professional reports,
statements or testimony. They shall include all relevant and pertinent information in such
reports, statements or testimony.
- Consulting engineers may express publicly a professional opinion on technical subjects
only when that opinion is founded upon adequate knowledge of the facts and competence in
the subject matter.
- Consulting engineers shall issue no statements, criticisms, or arguments on technical
matters which are inspired or paid for by interested parties on whose behalf they are
speaking and by revealing the existence of any interest they may have in the matters.
4. Consulting engineers shall act in professional matters for each client as faithful
agents or trustees.
- Consulting engineers shall disclose all known or potential conflicts of
interest to their clients by promptly informing them of any business association, interest
or other circumstances which could influence or appear to influence their judgment of the
quality of their services.
- Consulting engineers shall not accept compensation, financial or otherwise, from more
than one party for services on the same project, unless the circumstances are fully
disclosed to, and agreed to, by all interested parties.
- Consulting engineers in public service as members of a governmental body or department
shall not participate in decisions with respect to professional services solicited or
provided by them or their organizations in private engineering practices.
- Consulting engineers shall not solicit or accept a professional contract from a
governmental body on which a principal or officer of their organization serves as a
member.
5. Consulting engineers shall avoid improper solicitation of professional assignments.
- Consulting engineers shall not falsify or permit misrepresentation of their, or
their associates', academic or professional qualifications. They shall not misrepresent or
exaggerate their degree of responsibility in or for the subject matter or prior
assign-ments. Brochures or other presentations incident to the solicitation of assignments
shall not misrepresent pertinent facts concerning employees, associates, joint ventures or
past accomplishments with the intent and purpose of enhancing their qualifications and
their work.
- Consulting engineers shall not offer, give, solicit or receive, either directly or
indirectly, any political contribution in an amount intended to influence the award of a
contract by public authority, or which may be reasonably construed by the public of having
the effect or intent to influence the award of the contract. They shall not pay a
commission, percentage or brokerage fee in order to secure work except to a bona fide
employee or bona fide established commercial or marketing agencies retained by them.
Adopted October, 1980
Special Note:
These guidelines do not prohibit design competitions, free services, or contingent arrangements.
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