Activity Feed › Discussion Forums › Ask A Surveyor › Considering becoming a surveyor. AI, engineering degree, snakes, and demand.
-
Considering becoming a surveyor. AI, engineering degree, snakes, and demand.
joe-b replied 2 years, 7 months ago 16 Members · 27 Replies
-
I remember someone telling me that NJ a few years ago allowed anyone who met their LS requirements and was licensed in another state, could apply and receive his NJ LS without having to sit for the exam.
Maybe someone else here could confirm that, or maybe it’s just BS, or my faulty memory
-
IMO it would make sense for NY & NJ to have reciprocity, since I believe they most likely are very similar in their laws. The same might hold for the other surrounding colonial states (not necessarily all 13), but that might be as far as it goes. I couldn’t see reciprocity between colonial and USRS states. I remember some of those many, many moons ago as a budding surveyor in NY, reading some of the articles in POB (remember that?) about some of the court cases around the country and wondering “What the heck is this S##, T##, R## stuff and what’s it mean?.”
-
I agree that the actual surveying in the colonial states is similar. The subdivision and administrative rules are the things that vary.
-
-
Only for surveying, not for engineering. There will still be an experience-only route for engineers in NY as far as I know.
-
There was a short period of time where the state-specific exam requirement lapsed. They pretty quickly reinstated it. It didn’t have anything to do with having a survey license in another state. But I suppose if you had a license in another state, and you met all their education and experience requirements, then yes, you could apply for licensure and not have to take the state-specific exam.
It was an oversight, not by design.
-
Like others have indicated, you will have to get an ABET bachelor in surveying to get licensed in NJ (if it isn’t ABET-accredited then they need to “evaluate it”.) If you have experience already, you can apply for licensure in NY. But, as someone else said, they are changing the educational requirements in NY, so I would apply sooner than later.
In PA they have an internship requirement, so you will need to pass the FS exam, and apply for an LSIT designation, then gain 4 years of experience under a PLS before getting your license. So, I would get on that sooner than later, even if you have a degree you will need to meet that requirement as far as I know.
Good Luck.
Log in to reply.