Santti, Gary A. PE
PE No. 43731
Case No. 2019003809
Licensee was charged with violating Section 471.033(1)(k), Florida Statutes; failure to comply with the terms of any order of the Board.
PE No. 43731
Case No. 2019003809
Licensee was charged with violating Section 471.033(1)(k), Florida Statutes; failure to comply with the terms of any order of the Board.
PE No. 38398
Case Nos. 2017007080, 2018013940
In both cases, Licensee was charged with violating Section 471.033(1)(g), Florida Statutes; negligence in the practice of engineering.
PE No. 78453
Case Nos. 2017031256, 2017029746
In both cases, Licensee was charged with violating Section 471.033(1)(g), Florida Statutes; negligence in the practice of engineering.
PE No. 72639
Case No. 2018000854
Licensee was charged with violating Section 471.033(1)(g), Florida Statutes; negligence in the practice of engineering.
PE No. 71518
Case No. 2018012535
Licensee was charged with violating Section 471.033(1)(g), Florida Statutes; negligence in the practice of engineering; signing and sealing final engineering documents which contained material deficiencies.
The new year — 2020 — poses a concern for Professional Engineers when signing, dating, and sealing documents.
I would like to begin by thanking Ken Todd, P.E., (pictured) for serving as Chair of the Board for the past two years, as well as serving two full terms as a member of the Florida Board of Professional Engineers.
There is a common misconception among professionals who hold multiple licenses and certifications that an individual can choose which license or certification will be used for a particular project. That may not be the case.
Fire protection engineering rules have been updated to clarify ambiguous items, establish consistency between the rules and other statutes, and reduce unnecessary work by engineers and contractors, while still upholding FBPE’s statutory charge to protect the health, safety, and well-being of the public.
Contract language may not be enough to protect an engineer from a lawsuit by a third party if the facts demonstrate supervisory control and the “close nexus” between the engineer and the contractor.