AN ACT
RELATING TO BOARDS; AMENDING AND
ENACTING SECTIONS OF THE ENGINEERING AND SURVEYING PRACTICE ACT TO CLARIFY AND
AUGMENT THE CURRENT LAW.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF
THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section 1. Section 61-23-2 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 336, Section 2, as amended) is amended to read:
"61-23-2. DECLARATION OF POLICY.--The legislature
declares that it is a matter of public safety, interest and concern that the
practices of engineering and surveying merit and receive the confidence of the
public and that only qualified persons be permitted to engage in the practices of
engineering and surveying. In order to
safeguard life, health and property and to promote the public welfare, any
person in either public or private capacity practicing or offering to practice
engineering or surveying shall be required to submit evidence that he is
qualified to so practice and shall be licensed as provided in the Engineering
and Surveying Practice Act. It is
unlawful for any person to practice, offer to practice, engage in the business,
act in the capacity of, advertise or use in connection with his name or
otherwise assume, use or advertise any title or description tending to convey
the impression that he is a professional, licensed engineer or surveyor unless
that person is licensed or exempt under the provisions of the Engineering and Surveying
Practice Act. A person who engages in
the business or acts in the capacity of a professional engineer or professional
surveyor in New Mexico, except as otherwise provided in
Sections 61-23-22 and 61-23-27.10 NMSA
1978, with or without a New Mexico license, has thereby submitted to the
jurisdiction of the state and to the administrative jurisdiction of the board
and is subject to all penalties and remedies available for a violation of any
provision of Chapter 61, Article 23 NMSA 1978.
The practice of engineering or surveying shall be deemed a privilege
granted by the board based on the qualifications of the individual as evidenced
by the licensee's certificate, which shall not be transferable."
Section 2. Section 61-23-3 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 336, Section 3, as amended) is amended to read:
"61-23-3. DEFINITIONS.--As used in the Engineering and
Surveying Practice Act:
A. "approved" or "approval"
means acceptable to the board;
B. "board" means the state board of
licensure for professional engineers and surveyors;
C. "conviction" or
"convicted" means any final adjudication of guilt, whether pursuant
to a plea of nolo contendere or otherwise and whether or not the sentence is
deferred or suspended;
D. "engineer" means a person who is
qualified to practice engineering by reason of his intensive preparation and
knowledge in the use of mathematics, chemistry, physics and engineering
sciences, including the principles and methods of engineering analysis and
design acquired by professional education and engineering experience;
E. "engineering" or "practice of
engineering" means any creative or engineering work that requires
engineering education, training and experience in the application of special
knowledge of the mathematical, physical and engineering sciences to such creative
work as consultation, investigation, forensic investigation, evaluation,
planning and design of engineering works and systems, expert technical
testimony, engineering studies and the review of construction for the purpose
of assuring substantial compliance with drawings and specifications; any of
which embrace such creative work, either public or private, in connection with
any utilities, structures, buildings, machines, equipment, processes, work
systems, projects and industrial or consumer products or equipment of a
mechanical, electrical, hydraulic, chemical, pneumatic, environmental or
thermal nature, insofar as they involve safeguarding life, health or property,
and including such other professional services as may be necessary to the
planning, progress and completion of any engineering work. The "practice of engineering" may
include the use of photogrammetric methods to derive topographical and other
data. The "practice of
engineering" does not include responsibility for the supervision of
construction, site conditions, operations, equipment, personnel or the
maintenance of safety in the work place;
F. "engineering committee" means a
committee of the board entrusted to implement all business of the Engineering
and Surveying Practice Act as it pertains to the practice of engineering;
G. "engineer intern" means a person
who has qualified for, taken and passed an examination in the fundamental
engineering subjects as provided in the Engineering and Surveying Practice Act;
H. "fund" means the professional
engineers' and surveyors' fund;
I. "incidental practice" means the
performance of other professional services that are related to a licensee's
work as an engineer;
J. "person" means an individual,
corporation, business trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited liability
company, association, joint venture or any legal or commercial entity;
K. "professional development" means
education by a licensee in order to maintain, improve or expand skills and
knowledge obtained prior to initial licensure or to develop new and relevant
skills and knowledge;
L. "professional engineer",
"consulting engineer", "licensed engineer" or
"registered engineer" means a person who is licensed by the board to
practice the profession of engineering;
M. "responsible charge" means
responsibility for the direction, control and supervision of engineering or
surveying work, as the case may be, to assure that the work product has been
critically examined and evaluated for compliance with appropriate professional
standards by a licensee in that profession, and by sealing or signing the
documents, the professional engineer or surveyor accepts responsibility for the
engineering or surveying work, respectively, represented by the documents and
that applicable engineering or surveying standards have been met;
N. "surveying" or "practice of
surveying" means any service or work, the substantial performance of which
involves the application of the principles of mathematics and the related physical
and applied sciences for:
(1) the measuring and locating of lines, angles,
elevations and natural and man-made features in the air, on the surface of the
earth, within underground workings and on the beds or bodies of water for the
purpose of defining location, areas and volumes;
(2) the monumenting of property boundaries and
for the platting and layout of lands and subdivisions thereof;
(3) the application of photogrammetric methods
used to derive topographic and other data;
(4) the establishment of horizontal and vertical
controls for surveys for design, topographic surveys, including photogrammetric
methods, construction surveys of engineering and architectural public works
projects; and
(5) the preparation and perpetuation of maps,
records, plats, field notes and property descriptions;
O. "surveying committee" means a
committee of the board entrusted to implement all business of the Engineering
and Surveying Practice Act as it pertains to the practice of surveying;
P. "surveyor" or "professional
surveyor" means a person who is qualified to practice surveying by reason
of his intensive preparation and knowledge in the use of mathematics, physical
and applied sciences and surveying, including the principles and methods of
surveying acquired by education and experience, and who is licensed by the
board to practice surveying;
Q. "surveyor intern" means a person
who has qualified for, taken and passed an examination in the fundamentals of
surveying subjects as provided in the Engineering and Surveying Practice Act;
and
R. "surveying work" means the work
performed in the practice of surveying.
The board recognizes that there
may be an overlap between the work of engineers and surveyors in obtaining
survey information for the planning and design of an engineering project. A registered professional engineer who has
primary engineering responsibility and control of an engineering project may
perform an engineering survey.
Engineering surveys may be performed by a licensed professional engineer
on a project for which he is providing engineering design services. Engineering surveys include topographic
surveying activities required to support the sound conception, planning,
design, construction, maintenance and operation of said projects but exclude
the surveying of real property for establishment of land boundaries, rights of
way, easements and the dependent or independent surveys or resurveys of the
public land system."
Section 3. Section 61-23-14.1 NMSA 1978 (being Laws
1993, Chapter 218, Section 12, as amended) is amended to read:
"61-23-14.1. LICENSURE AS A PROFESSIONAL
ENGINEER--REQUIREMENTS.--
A. Licensure as a professional engineer may be
either through examination or through endorsement or comity. In either case, an applicant shall file the
appropriate application in which it shall be demonstrated that the applicant:
(1) is of good moral character and reputation;
(2) has five references, three of whom shall be
licensees practicing in the branch of engineering for which the applicant is
applying and who have personal knowledge of the applicant's engineering
experience and reputation. The use of
nonlicensed engineer references having personal knowledge of the applicant's
engineering experience and reputation other than professional engineers may be
accepted by the board provided a satisfactory written explanation is given; and
meets one of the following requirements:
(a) is certified as an engineer intern and has at
least four years of board-approved engineering experience after graduation from
a board-approved engineering curriculum;
(b) is certified as an engineer intern, and has,
including the two years for engineer intern certification, at least six years
of board-approved engineering experience after graduation from a
board-approved, four-year engineering technology curriculum accredited by the
technical accreditation commission of the accreditation board for engineering
and technology;
(c) has obtained a doctorate degree in an
engineering discipline recognized by the board and has a minimum of four years
of board-approved engineering experience subsequent to the awarding of the
degree;
(d) has obtained a master's degree in an
engineering discipline recognized by the board from a board-approved program
and has a minimum of six years of engineering experience subsequent to the
awarding of the degree; or
(e) has graduated from a board-approved,
four-year engineering curriculum and has twelve or more years of engineering
experience acceptable to the board.
B. After the applicant's application is approved
by the board, the applicant shall be allowed to take the appropriate
examination for licensure as a professional engineer.
C. Upon successfully completing the examination,
the applicant shall be eligible to be licensed as a professional engineer upon
action of the board.
D. An applicant may be licensed by endorsement
or comity if:
(1) he is currently licensed as an engineer in
the District of Columbia, another state, a territory or a possession of the
United States, provided the licensure does not conflict with the provisions of
the Engineering and Surveying Practice Act and that the standards required by
the licensure or the applicant's qualifications equaled or exceeded the
licensure standards in New Mexico at the time the applicant was initially
licensed; or
(2) he is currently licensed as an engineer in a
foreign country and can demonstrate, to the board's satisfaction, evidence that
the licensure was based on standards that equal or exceed those currently
required for licensure by the Engineering and Surveying Practice Act and can satisfactorily
demonstrate to the board his competence in current engineering standards and
procedures."
Section 4. A new section of the Engineering and
Surveying Practice Act, Section 61-23-23 NMSA 1978, is enacted to read:
"61-23-23. AUTHORITY TO INVESTIGATE--CIVIL PENALTIES FOR
UNLICENSED PERSONS--ENGINEERING.--
A. The board may investigate and initiate a
hearing on a complaint against a person who does not have a license, who is not
exempt from the Engineering and Surveying Practice Act and who acts in the
capacity of a professional engineer within the meaning of the Engineering and
Surveying Practice Act.
B. If after the hearing the board determines
that based on the evidence the person committed a violation pursuant to the
Engineering and Surveying Practice Act, it shall, in addition to any other
sanction, action or remedy, issue an order that imposes a civil penalty up to
five thousand dollars ($5,000) per violation.
C. In determining the amount of the civil
penalty it imposes, the board shall consider:
(1) the seriousness of the violation;
(2) the economic benefit to the violator that was generated by the
violator's commission of the violation;
(3) the violator's history of violations; and
(4) any other considerations the board deems appropriate.
D. A person aggrieved by the board's decision
may appeal a decision made or an order issued pursuant to Subsection B of this
section to the district court pursuant to Section 39-3-1.1 NMSA 1978.
E. Failure to pay a fine levied by the board or
to otherwise comply with an order issued by the board pursuant to the
Engineering and Surveying Practice Act is a misdemeanor, and upon conviction
the person shall be sentenced pursuant to Section 31-19-1 NMSA 1978. Conviction shall be grounds for further
action against the person by the board and for judicial sanctions or relief, including
a petition for injunction."
Section 5. A new section of the Engineering and
Surveying Practice Act, Section 61-23-27.15 NMSA 1978, is enacted to read:
"61-23-27.15. AUTHORITY TO INVESTIGATE--CIVIL PENALTIES FOR
UNLICENSED PERSONS--SURVEYING.--
A. The board may investigate and initiate a
hearing on a complaint against a person who does not have a license, who is not
exempt from the Engineering and Surveying Practice Act and who acts in the
capacity of a professional surveyor within the meaning of the Engineering and
Surveying Practice Act.
B. If after the hearing the board determines
that based on the evidence the person committed a violation under the
Engineering and Surveying Practice Act, it shall, in addition to any other
sanction, action or remedy, issue an order that imposes a civil penalty up to
five thousand dollars ($5,000) per violation.
C. In determining the amount of the civil
penalty it imposes, the board shall consider:
(1) the seriousness of the violation;
(2) the economic benefit to the violator that was
generated by the violator's commission of the violation;
(3) the violator's history of violations; and
(4) any other considerations the board deems
appropriate.
D. A person aggrieved may appeal a decision made
or an order issued pursuant to Subsection B of this section to the district
court pursuant to Section 39-3-1.1 NMSA 1978.
E. Failure to pay a fine levied by the board or
to otherwise comply with an order issued by the board pursuant to the
Engineering and Surveying Practice Act is a misdemeanor and upon conviction the
person shall be sentenced pursuant to the provisions of Section 31-19-1 NMSA
1978. Conviction shall be grounds for
further action against the person by the board and for judicial sanctions or
relief, including a petition for injunction."
HB 923
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