• @[email protected]
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    36 months ago

    He was testifying in front of a commission, about a bad designed drain, for a HOA, or similar.

    • Ook the Librarian
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      86 months ago

      You’re correct that the headline is misleading. He’s not just posting in some forum. He is testifying as an expert. So there is a little more subtly.

      I would like to add. He was not paid. He also was not certifying any designs as safe. You should not need to be a licensed expert to show faults in existing designs.

      • @[email protected]
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        -26 months ago

        If your argument is that you’re an expert, then you need to have the credentials you claim to have. Anyone can show the faults in a design, but he’s explicitly doing novel calculations and analysis - ie not just reviewing someone else’s work.

        Now that being said, it looks like he never needed a professional license as he fell under an exemption, in which case I feel like they shot themselves in the foot. He’s got previous experience doing the same thing he’s examining - hydraulics and fluid flow analysis. Regardless of his status as “professional engineer”, his previous experience sould qualify him to testify.

        • Ook the Librarian
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          36 months ago

          You’re right. I was just adding more considerations.

          The lawyer son should have taken the calculations to a licensed professional engineer to sign off on. In this particular case, I like the ruling in the headline, but I understand the importance of licensing boards for professionals.