Joe Carson is a licensed professional engineer (PE) with
three decades of experience as a federal employee whose job involved
responsibility for nuclear safety.
He is also an activist and whistleblower who has devoted much of his
time in recent years to problems with safety and accountability in the
engineering profession. Joe
recently sent me a couple of articles that, taken together, raise an
interesting question: if engineers
working in U. S. industries had to have PE licenses, could they raise the level
of workplace safety?
The first article reports that the U. S. government's
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) recently levied $1.7
million in fines against Ashley Furniture for numerous safety violations and
injuries in its large plant in Arcadia, Wisconsin. OSHA says about 4,500 people are employed at the facility,
making it probably one of the largest furniture factories in the U. S. But Ashley's Arcadia plant doesn't seem
to be a safe place to work. OSHA
says that Ashley's plant workers have suffered over 1,000 injuries in three and
a half years, and have placed the firm in its Severe Violator Enforcement
Program. A spokesman for Ashley
disputes the allegations and calls the fines "grossly inappropriate and
overzealous."
In some countries, engineers cannot work in their profession
at all without obtaining a PE license or equivalent from a government
agency. In turn, the government
can hold licensed engineers responsible for ethics-related performance, such as
the safety of products manufactured, and even for the safety of employees who
work at a plant under the engineer's supervision, broadly defined. There is an entire specialty called
manufacturing engineering which is devoted to the efficient—and safe—design of
manufacturing facilities. If U. S.
manufacturing engineers had to have PE licenses in order to work in private
industries, and the terms of their licenses spelled out minimum safety
standards that facilities they designed had to meet, it stands to reason that
with their jobs on the line, manufacturing engineers would pay a lot of
attention to workplace safety in facilities they were responsible for.
So why isn't that the case in the U. S.? Because of a little-known set of laws
collectively known as the "industrial exemption." Back in the 1930s when engineering
societies began to lobby state legislatures to enact PE licensing laws,
corporate manufacturing and industrial interests got wind of this and inserted
industrial exemptions into the laws in many states. The effect of these exemptions is to exempt firms that are
basically big enough to look out for themselves from having to hire only
licensed engineers. Some states
without industrial exemptions nevertheless do not enforce the licensing of all
engineers. The history of PE
licensing and regulation is complicated, but the results are simple enough to
summarize: unless you practice
engineering as a direct service to the general public (as in a consulting
firm), or work for a government agency engaged in public works such as roads
and bridges, you generally do not have to hold a PE license to work in the
engineering field.
In his fair-minded way, Joe also sent me another article,
this one on the question of whether state licensing laws have gone too
far. The recent rise of unlicensed
taxi-equivalent private services such as Uber has raised the issue of whether
we really need to license professions such as hair-braiding and interior
decorating. The arguments in favor
of professional licensing made by trade groups usually start from the premise
that the public needs protection from untrained amateurs who don't know what
they're doing. Consequently, the
state has an interest in licensing X profession, and the licensing process
typically requires a minimum amount of training and certification for the licensee. With such training, the public can now
rest assured that a licensed practitioner of X knows what he or she is doing,
and certain dire consequences, ranging from mis-braided hair to clashing colors
in your living room, can be avoided.
I let myself go a little there at the end of that paragraph,
but the basic point is sound in some cases. Everyone wants licensing for highly trained professionals in
life-critical jobs such as surgeons and airline pilots, because the negative
consequences of error in these professions are so obvious. Critics of state licensing laws counter
that while licensing can raise the standards of performance in a profession, it
can also restrict entry and create a seller's market for the profession's
services. This lets licensed
members of the profession make more money, but arguably leads to more expensive
services that are not always better, as numerous studies comparing services in
states with and without particular licensing laws have shown.
If the industrial exemptions went away and states began
aggressively enforcing PE licensing for all engineers, we would certainly see a
spike in engineering salaries for licensed engineers. There would also be a rush to get PE licenses, which usually
take years to obtain for undergraduate engineers, who can only get
"EIT" (Engineer In Training) status immediately after passing an
initial exam, and then must accumulate some years of experience before applying
for a full license.
As to whether products and workplaces would be safer, that
would depend on whether safety requirements were built into the licensing laws,
as I described above. Currently,
that is not the case, although as a matter of principle, engineers at
facilities such as Ashley Furniture ought to consider workplace safety more
than they apparently do at present, license or no license. If no engineer would work for a firm
out of fear of losing his or her license, it would apply a novel kind of
pressure that would encourage such organizations to clean up their act
safety-wise. But it would also
turn licensed engineers into a sort of government agent, a role that many might
find uncomfortable, to say the least.
I thank Joe Carson for bringing this issue to my attention,
and I hope that engineers responsible for workplace safety, including those at
Ashley Furniture, will follow Joe's example of holding safety paramount above
profit, promotion, and even one's job, whether or not licensing laws are
changed.
Sources: Joe Carson sent me notice of the
New York Times articles "OSHA Cites Ashley Furniture Over Dozens of Safety
Violations" at http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/03/business/osha-cites-ashley-furniture-for-dozens-of-safety-violations.html
and "Job Licenses in Spotlight as Uber Rises" at http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/28/business/economy/ubers-success-casts-doubt-on-many-job-licenses.html. You can read more about Joe Carson and
his work at http://www.carsonversusdoe.com. For the history of PE licensing, I referred to an article by
Neil Norman on the National Society of Professional Engineers website at http://www.nspe.org/sites/default/files/resources/pdfs/blog/industry_exemptions-neil_norman.pdf. I last blogged about PE licensing on
April 13, 2013 at
Unfortunately I don't see PE licensing as a solution to a safety problem. The construction industry has PEs in some companies and none in others while experiencing a similar level of risk as the manufacturing industry. If one studied the accident rate among both types of construction companies I don't think a significant difference would be found.
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