The Florida Senate
BILL ANALYSIS AND FISCAL IMPACT STATEMENT
(This document is based on the provisions contained in the legislation as of the latest date listed below.)
Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Committee on Rules
BILL: SB 940
INTRODUCER: Senator Baxley
SUBJECT: Professional Structural Engineers
DATE: February 14, 2022 REVISED:
ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR REFERENCE ACTION
1. Kraemer Imhof RI Favorable
2. Renner McKay CM Favorable
3. Kraemer Phelps RC Favorable
I. Summary:
SB 940 authorizes the Florida Board of Professional Engineers (board) to establish minimum
standards of practice for the profession of structural engineering, which includes the structural
analysis and design of components for threshold buildings (those higher than 50 feet/three stories
or with an occupancy of greater than 500 persons), including engineering that requires significant
structural engineering education, training, experience, and examination, as determined by the
board.
The bill prohibits, effective March 1, 2024, the practice of professional structural engineering by
any person who is not a licensed professional structural engineer or otherwise exempted from
licensure under ch. 471, F.S., relating to engineering.
Under the bill, the following titles may not be used by persons who are not licensed or exempt
from licensing under current law relating to engineering: “licensed structural engineer,”
“professional structural engineer,” or “registered structural engineer,” or any designation that
indicates a person holds an active license.
The bill authorizes the board to certify persons as qualified to be licensed to practice professional
structural engineering if they are licensed or qualify for licensure as an engineer, have at least
four years of active structural engineering experience under the supervision of a licensed
professional engineer, have passed certain professional examinations, and meet other
administrative requirements. The bill also requires the board to certify qualified foreign or out-
of-state applicants for licensure by endorsement in certain circumstances.
SB 942, relating to Fees/Professional Structural Engineer Licensing, is linked to this bill, and
provides for the establishment of licensing fees by the board to be paid by persons seeking
licensure as a professional structural engineer.
BILL: SB 940 Page 2
See Section V, Fiscal Impact Statement.
The bill provides an effective date of July 1, 2022.
II. Present Situation:
Regulation of Professional Engineers
The practice of engineering is regulated by the board. Section 471.005(7), F.S., defines the term
“engineering” to include:
the term “professional engineering” and means any service or creative
work, the adequate performance of which requires engineering education,
training, and experience in the application of special knowledge of the
mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences to such services or
creative work as consultation, investigation, evaluation, planning, and
design of engineering works and systems, planning the use of land and
water, teaching of the principles and methods of engineering design,
engineering surveys, and the inspection of construction for the purpose of
determining in general if the work is proceeding in compliance with
drawings and specifications, any of which embraces such services or work,
either public or private, in connection with any utilities, structures,
buildings, machines, equipment, processes, work systems, projects, and
industrial or consumer products or equipment of a mechanical, electrical,
hydraulic, pneumatic, or thermal nature, insofar as they involve
safeguarding life, health, or property; and includes such other professional
services as may be necessary to the planning, progress, and completion of
any engineering services. A person who practices any branch of
engineering; who, by verbal claim, sign, advertisement, letterhead, or card,
or in any other way, represents himself or herself to be an engineer or,
through the use of some other title, implies that he or she is an engineer or
that he or she is licensed under this chapter; or who holds himself or herself
out as able to perform, or does perform, any engineering service or work or
any other service designated by the practitioner which is recognized as
engineering shall be construed to practice or offer to practice engineering
within the meaning and intent of this chapter [ch. 471, Engineering].
Unlike most Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) professions, the
administrative, investigative, and prosecutorial services for the board are not provided by the
DBPR. The DBPR contracts with the Florida Engineers Management Corporation (FEMC), a
nonprofit corporation, to provide such services.1 The FEMC is a public-private nonprofit
association that has contracted with the DBPR to handle administrative, investigative, and
prosecutorial services for the Board of Professional Engineers.2
1
See s. 471.038, F.S., the Florida Engineers Management Corporation Act, for the duties and authority of the FEMC.
2
See the Annual Report of the FEMC for FY 2020-2021, available at https://fbpe.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/2020-21-
FEMC-Annual-Report.pdf (last visited Feb. 4, 2022), and the contract between the DBPR and the FEMC for the period
BILL: SB 940 Page 3
Section 471.008, F.S., authorizes the board to adopt rules to implement the provisions of
ch. 471, F.S., and for ch. 455, F.S., which provides the general licensing procedures for
professional licensing by the DBPR and its professional licensing boards. The board has adopted
responsibility rules for the profession of engineering addressing a variety of issues, including the
design of structures and fire protection systems.3
There were 62,909 licensed professional engineers in Fiscal Year 2020-2021.4 The FEMC
processed 231 complaints regarding engineering practice during that period, with 137 of those
complaints found to be legally sufficient to proceed, and filed 68 administrative complaints in
cases where probable cause was found relating to a violation of the practice act.5
Professional Engineer License Qualifications and Exemptions
Section 471.013, F.S., provides the license qualifications for a professional engineer. In order to
be licensed as a professional engineer, a person must successfully pass two examinations: the
fundamentals examination and the principles and practices examination. Prior to being permitted
to sit for the fundamentals examination, an applicant must have graduated from:
 An approved engineering science curriculum of four years or more in a board-approved
school, college, or university; or
 An approved engineering technology curriculum of four years or more in a board-approved
school, college, or university.6
The FEMC must issue a license to any applicant who the board certifies is qualified to practice
engineering and who has passed the fundamentals examination and the principles and practice
examination.7
Under s. 471.015(2), F.S., the board must certify for licensure any applicant who has submitted
proof of being at least 18 years old and has the required engineering experience. For graduates of
an approved engineering science curriculum, the applicant must have a record of at least four
years of active engineering experience sufficient to indicate competence to be in responsible
charge of engineering. Graduates of an approved engineering technology curriculum must have a
record of at least six years of such qualified experience.8
between July 1, 2021 and June 30, 2025 at https://fbpe.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/2021-25-DBPR-FEMC-Contract.pdf
(last visited Feb. 4, 2022).
3
The responsibility rules are in Fla. Admin. Code Chapters 61G15-30, 61G15-31, 61G15-32, and 61G15-33 (2021).
4
There were 530 inactive professional engineering licenses in that fiscal year. See Department of Business and Professional
Regulation, Annual Report, Fiscal Year 2020-2021, for the Divisions of Certified Public Accounting, Professions, Real
Estate, and Regulation (2020-2021 Annual Report) at p. 20, at
http://www.myfloridalicense.com/DBPR/os/documents/DivisionAnnualReport_FY2021.pdf (last visited Feb. 4, 2022).
5
See the Annual Report of the FEMC for FY 2020-2021, at https://fbpe.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/2020-21-FEMC-
Annual-Report.pdf, at p. 2 (last visited Feb. 4, 2022). The FEMC also filed 89 Final Orders with the DBPR; entered into
three negotiations, and tried one administrative hearing; dismissed two cases after re-consideration; issued 16 reprimands,
three suspensions, four probations, three project reviews, and three license restrictions; and imposed $44,765.23 in
administrative costs and $58,500 in fines. The board also issued 88 Final Orders against licensees.
6
Section 471.013(1)(a), F.S.
7
Section 471.015(1), F.S.
8
See ss. 471.015(2)(a)1. and 2., F.S.
BILL: SB 940 Page 4
Section 471.003(2), F.S., identifies those persons who are exempted from the licensing
requirements of ch. 471, F.S.
Special Inspectors of Threshold Buildings
Section 471.015(7), F.S., authorizes the board to establish by rule the qualifications for
certification of licensees as inspectors of threshold buildings. A “threshold building” is “any
building which is greater than three stories or 50 feet in height, or which has an assembly
occupancy classification as defined in the Florida Building Code which exceeds 5,000 square
feet in area and an occupant content of greater than 500 persons.”9
The board is also authorized to establish minimum qualifications for the qualified representative
of the special inspector who is authorized to perform inspections of threshold buildings on behalf
of the special inspector.10
The agency charged with enforcing the building code (enforcing agency)11 must require a special
inspector to perform structural inspections on a threshold building pursuant to a structural
inspection plan prepared by the engineer or architect of record.12
Use of Engineer Seals
Section 471.025(1), F.S., authorizes the board to prescribe, by rule, one or more forms of seal to
be used by licensed engineers. Each licensee must obtain at least one seal.13 All final drawings,
specifications, plans, reports, or documents prepared or issued by the licensee and filed for
public record and all final documents provided to the owner or the owner’s representative must
be signed by the licensee, dated, and sealed with the seal.14 The signature, date, and seal are
evidence of the authenticity of the document to which they are affixed.15
A licensee may not affix or permit to be affixed his or her seal, name, or digital signature to any
plan, specification, drawing, final bid document, or other document that depicts work which he
or she is not licensed to perform or which is beyond his or her profession or specialty.16
A successor engineer seeking to reuse documents previously sealed by another engineer must be
able to independently re-create all of the work done by the original engineer, and assumes full
9
See s. 553.71(12), F.S.
10
See s. 471.015(7), F.S.
11
See s. 553.71(5), F.S., which defines the term “local enforcement agency” to mean “an agency of local government, a local
school board, a community college board of trustees, or a university board of trustees in the State University System with
jurisdiction to make inspections of buildings and to enforce the codes which establish standards for design, construction,
erection, alteration, repair, modification, or demolition of public or private buildings, structures, or facilities.”
12
Section 553.79(5)(a), F.S.
13
Section 471.025(1), F.S.
14
Id.
15
Id.
16
Section 471.025(3), F.S.
BILL: SB 940 Page 5
professional and legal responsibility by signing and affixing his or her seal to the assumed
documents.17
Use of Descriptive Titles
Section 471.031, F.S., sets forth the permissible and prohibited titles for persons licensed under
ch. 471, F.S., and for persons who are otherwise exempted from such licensure. With certain
exceptions for persons exempted from licensure, the use of the name “professional engineer” or
any other title, designation, abbreviation, or indication that a person holds an active license as an
engineer when the person is not licensed under ch. 471, F.S., is prohibited, along with use of the
following titles:
 Agricultural engineer;
 Air-conditioning engineer;
 Architectural engineer;
 Building engineer;
 Chemical engineer;
 Civil engineer;
 Control systems engineer;
 Electrical engineer;
 Environmental engineer;
 Fire protection engineer;
 Industrial engineer;
 Manufacturing engineer;
 Mechanical engineer;
 Metallurgical engineer;
 Mining engineer;
 Minerals engineer;
 Marine engineer;
 Nuclear engineer;
 Petroleum engineer;
 Plumbing engineer;
 Structural engineer;
 Transportation engineer;
 Software engineer;
 Computer hardware engineer; and
 Systems engineer.18
Any person who violates the provisions commits a misdemeanor of the first degree.19
17
Section 471.025(4), F.S. The original engineer is released from any professional responsibility or civil liability for work
that is assumed.
18
See s. 471.031(1)(b), F.S.
19
Section 471.031(2), F.S. A first degree misdemeanor is punishable by up to a year in county jail and a fine not exceeding
$1,000. Sections 775.082 and 775.083, F.S.
BILL: SB 940 Page 6
Imposition of Discipline by the Board
The conduct that constitutes grounds for the imposition of discipline by the board are set forth in
s. 471.033, F.S. Such discipline includes denial of an application for licensure, suspension or
revocation of a license, imposition of fines, reprimands, probation, or restitution, and restriction
of the authorized scope of practice of a licensee.20
Voluntary Structural Engineer Associations
The Florida Structural Engineers Association (FSEA) provides input on building codes and
enforcement and sponsors technical seminars to address common concerns of the profession.21
Members of FSEA become members of the National Council of Structural Engineers
Associations (NCSEA).22 The NCSEA was formed to improve the standard level of practice of
the structural engineering profession and provide an identifiable resource for seeking
communication with the profession.23 It advocates for the practice of structural engineering on
behalf of its 44 member organizations.24 According to the NCSEA, two states restrict who may
use the title “structural engineer,”25 eight states have a partial practice act for structural
engineers,26 and two states have a full practice act for structural engineers.27
The National Council of Examiners for Engineering and Surveying is a nonprofit organization
composed of 69 engineering and surveying licensing boards from all 50 states, the District of
Columbia, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.28 It
provides services including engineering examinations, surveying examinations, exam preparation
materials, records programs, and credentials evaluations among other services to licensing
jurisdictions.29
III. Effect of Proposed Changes:
Section 1 amends s. 471.003, F.S., to prohibit, effective March 1, 2024, the practice of
professional structural engineering by any person who is not a licensed professional structural
engineer or otherwise exempted from licensure under ch. 471, F.S., related to engineering.
The bill prohibits the use of the name or title of “licensed structural engineer,” “professional
structural engineer,” or “registered structural engineer” or any other title that indicates an