Step 3: Temporal Dynamics Pass

Extract actions, events, causal chains, and temporal relationships

Selection of Firm—Promise of Future Engineering Work on a Public Project
Step 3 of 5

Case Sections

Facts Section Content:
Facts:
Engineer A is a principal in a medium-sized engineering firm with expertise in mechanical and electrical engineering.
Engineer A’s firm is retained on a speculative basis by Engineer B, a local civil engineer, to assist City X in applying for a federal grant for certain wastewater treatment equipment upgrades for the city’s wastewater treatment facility.
The application is successful, City X obtains the grant, and Engineer B is retained to design the waste water equipment upgrades.
In recognition of Engineer A’s work in securing the grant, Engineer C, the chief city engineer, verbally promises to select Engineer A’s firm on a future engineering project for City X.
Discussion Section Content:
The manner in which engineers and engineering firms are selected and compensated has, in the past, been the subject of various provisions of the NSPE Code of Ethics as well as NSPE Board of Ethical Review opinions. However, over the past 40 years, as a result of a series of actions undertaken by the U.S. Justice Department, antitrust, and First Amendment rulings by the U.S. Supreme Court, NSPE and other engineering organizations (as well as medical, legal, dental, and accounting professional societies) have been required to remove or modify Code of Ethics provisions. These provisions relate to professional selection, compensation, restrictions on competitive bidding, free engineering, supplanting, advertising, and other practices. Therefore, these professional groups, including NSPE, are prohibited from issuing ethical or other policy guidance in these and other areas. At the same time, among one of the most fundamental outcomes of these antitrust actions and rules was the basic principle that federal, state, and local laws governing procedures to procure engineering services are not affected and remain in full force and effect. The Board believes that this case should be viewed in light of that basic principle. For purposes of this case, this Board is assuming that public procurement laws and regulations were in place that outlined the policies and the procedures for selecting an engineering firm. Assuming that was the case under the present facts, it is the Board’s view that Engineer C’s action in verbally agreeing to select Engineer A’s firm on a future engineering project for City X would constitute a subversion or a misuse of the existing procurement policies and procedures in place in City X. Regardless of the method of professional selection utilized in City X, one must assume that the method would, at a minimum, involve public announcement along with free and open opportunity for all qualified and eligible engineers and engineering firms to be considered for the contract. By promising Engineer A in advance that Engineer A would be selected for a future contract without considering the qualifications, experience, and other factors is not consistent with either the spirit or the intent of the NSPE Code of Ethics.