Fire Protection Engineers Clarify Roles in Designing Fire Protection Systems
The Society of Fire
Protection Engineers (SFPE) has updated its position statement on the role engineers and technicians play in designing fire protection systems.
Fire Protection Engineers Clarify Roles in Designing Fire Protection Systems
The Society of Fire
Protection Engineers (SFPE) has updated its position statement on the role engineers and technicians play in designing fire protection systems.
The purpose of the SFPE position — titled The Engineer and the Technician: Designing Fire Protection
Systems — is to describe reasonable
and prudent roles and responsibilities of engineers and technicians
when designing fire protection systems.
“In the United States, the design of fire protection systems is
governed by state and local regulations. As a result, the required
qualifications for professionals who design these systems differ from
state to state,” says Chris Jelenewicz, engineering program manager
with the SFPE. “In fact, some state and local authorities do not require
a licensed engineer to take part in the design of these important life
safety systems.”
The licensing of engineers is important because of the essential role
engineering has in society. Normally, structures and systems that impact
the public’s safety are required to be designed by licensed engineers. For
example, bridges, roads, electrical systems, drinking water systems and
building structures are all required by state engineering laws to be
designed by licensed engineers.
The engineering profession is regulated by licensing boards in each
U.S. state, and they set high standards for professional engineers
to protect the public. By law, many jurisdictions require engineers
to be licensed in order to practice.
“The SFPE position statement stresses the point that both engineers and
technicians play an important role in the process as long as both practice
within their areas of competence,” says Jelenewicz. “Moreover, it outlines
the vital contributions fire protection engineers make to the public’s
safety by designing fire protection systems that keep people safe from fire.”
“The distinction of these roles has been very controversial in the industry
for many years,” says SFPE President Samuel Dannaway. “At one extreme,
there are engineers who feel that preparation of all drawings for fire
protection systems constitutes the practice of engineering. At the other
extreme is a small group of fire protection contractors who argue that
the design of fire protection systems can be handled by their technicians
without the oversight from an engineer.”
In addition to SFPE, in August 2004, the National Council for Examiners of
Engineering and Surveying (NCEES) released a position statement on the same
issue, titled “Position Statement No. 25, Fire Protection.” In this statement,
NCEES recognizes the design of fire protection systems to be the practice of
engineering.
The NCEES is an organization composed of engineering and surveying boards
representing all U.S. states and territories.
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