Title: Premise E Scenarios
1Premise E Scenarios
- Information Damaging to Clients Interest
- Confidentiality Agreement
- Duty to Report Safety Violations
- Client Request for Secrecy
2E-1 Information Damaging to Clients Interest
- Facts
- XYZ Corp. is advised by the State Pollution
Control Authority that it has 60 days to apply
for a permit to discharge waste into a receiving
body of water, and is advised of the minimum
standard to be met. - XYZ employs consultant Engineer Doe to submit a
detailed report that the receiving body of water
will still meet established standards after
receiving the wastes. Doe verbally advises XYZ,
prior to completion of a written report, that
standards wont be met, and that corrective
action will be very costly. - XYZ terminates Does contract, with full payment,
and instructs him not to prepare a written
report. - XYZ presents data at a public hearing that
standards will be met. - Doe learns of the hearing and XYZs presentation,
but does not report his earlier contradictory
findings to the authority.
3E-1 Information Damaging to Clients Interest
- Question
- Was it ethical for Doe not to report his findings
to the authority upon learning of the hearing?
4E-1 Information Damaging to Clients Interest
- Discussion
- The engineer will act in professional matters for
each client or employer as a faithful agent or
trustee, Doe did right to advise XYZ as he did. - Termination of contract with full pay for
services rendered is a business decision. Doe
has reason to question why a written report was
requested to not be rendered. - Doe learning of the hearing is a circumstance
where the engineer should report requests for
unprofessional conduct to the authorities. - Does duty to the public is paramount, as
concerns safety, health and welfare.
5E-1 Information Damaging to Clients Interest
- Conclusion
- It was unethical for Doe not to report his
findings to the authority upon learning of the
hearing. - (Basis NSPE BER Case 76-4)
6E-2 Confidentiality Agreement
- Facts
- Engineer A, a principal in ABC Engineering,
submits qualifications and a proposal to a local
municipality TWN to be considered as a consultant
to research a former dump site that may be used
for reclamation as a wetland. Dump was closed
many years prior, used for decades for commercial
waste. - A meets with TWN officials, TWN indicates to
A that there could be hazardous and toxic
wastes in the dump. - A is awarded contract, informed that he must
sign a confidentiality clause precluding him from
releasing any results/information without TWNs
written permission. A signs contract and the
clause. - A finds dump was improperly closed, surface
soil tests inconclusive, but high contaminant
levels could be exposed due to erosion of cover,
and be washed into the adjacent river. - Given these findings, TWN will move wetlands
reclamation and planned recreation area
elsewhere. River is used for drinking water for
other communities. - TWN terminates As contract, A tells TWN to
remediate the site, TWN refuses, citing expense,
reminds A of the confidentiality clause and the
legal consequences of going public. A decides
not to inform the appropriate authorities.
7E-2 Confidentiality Agreement
- Questions
- Was it ethical for A not to inform the
appropriate regulatory agencies of his findings
and the potential dangers? - Did A behave ethically in signing the
confidentiality clause, after he was informed by
the city of the possibility of the site being
hazardous/toxic?
8E-2 Confidentiality Agreement
- Discussion
- The most fundamental ethical principal related to
the practice of engineering is protection of the
public health and safety. - This view is not universally shared within and
outside the engineering profession. Some
dissenters claim that the highest duty is to
their employer or client, and not to the public. - Examples of similar precedent are BER Cases 92-6,
89-7 (will be E-3), 90-5. - A cannot remain party to a conspiracy of
silence against public health and safety. - A did not carefully think through his signing
of the agreement.
9E-2 Confidentiality Agreement
- Conclusions
- It was unethical for A not to inform the
appropriate regulatory agencies of his findings
and the potential dangers. - A was not ethical in signing the
confidentiality clause, after he was informed by
the city of the possibility of the site being
hazardous/toxic. - (Basis NSPE BER Case 97-5)
10E-3 Duty to Report Safety Violations
- Facts
- Engineer A is retained to investigate the
structural integrity of a 60-year old occupied
apartment building, which his client is planning
to sell. Contract is to keep the structural
report confidential, building is to be sold as
is, no plans to repair or renovate any system
within the building prior to sale. - A determines building is structurally sound.
Client confides to A that there are
deficiencies in building electrical/mechanical
systems, violates applicable codes and standards.
A realizes that these deficiencies could cause
injury to the occupants, makes brief mention of
this in his report. - A does not report the safety violations to any
third party, in light of the confidentiality
agreement.
11E-3 Duty to Report Safety Violations
- Question
- Was it ethical for Engineer A not to report the
safety violations to the appropriate public
authorities?
12E-3 Duty to Report Safety Violations
- Discussion
- If the engineer has a legal or ethical
responsibility to disclose the information in
question, the engineer is released from the
obligation to maintain confidentiality. The
threshold for such is a gray area. - Paramount is public health and safety!
- A went along with the clients desire.
13E-3 Duty to Report Safety Violations
- Conclusion
- It was unethical for Engineer A not to report
the safety violations to the appropriate public
authorities. - .
- (Basis NSPE BER Case 89-7)
14E-4 Client Request for Secrecy
- Facts
- Engineer A is designer of a large commercial
building, and used new and innovative design
concepts. After construction is complete and the
building is occupied, A finds an omission in
his calculations, building could collapse under
severe, but not unusual wind conditions. - A, the architect, client, and city engineer B
agree upon remedial construction at night, when
the building is unoccupied. A storm monitoring
system and evacuation plan for the building and
surrounding neighborhood are developed. - Architect and client want the situation to be
kept secret, to avoid consequences of a public
panic, but the city engineer B has concern for
the public and their right to know.
15E-4 Client Request for Secrecy
- Questions
- Is it ethical for Engineer A, the structural
engineer, to comply with the clients and
architects desire for secrecy? - Is it ethical for Engineer B, the city engineer,
to maintain the secrecy?
16E-4 Client Request for Secrecy
- Discussion
- Paramount is public health and safety!
- A is to be commended for promptly reporting his
findings. - Nevertheless, repairs will take months, occupants
and large area of the city are in jeopardy, with
an untested evacuation plan. - A went along with the clients desire for work
at night, maintaining the secrecy.
17E-4 Client Request for Secrecy
- Conclusions
- It was not ethical for Engineer A, the structural
engineer, to comply with the clients and
architects desire for secrecy. - It was not ethical for Engineer B, the city
engineer, to maintain the secrecy. - (Basis NSPE BER Case 98-9)