Ethics Assignment Questions
Ethics Assignment Questions
Ethics Assignment Questions
SCHOOL OF COMPUTING
DEPARTMENT OF CSE
Assignment-1 Questions
10. Engineer A had been practising engineering for over two decades; butfor
the past 10 years, she has been in a management position: supervising
traffic flowmeasurements and highway planning for the provincial
government. Recently, she left thegovernment job to enter private practice,
and one of her first contracts was to design a structurethat had to satisfy
the National Building Code. Although Engineer A had extensive vtu14276
experiencewith this type of structure prior to entering government service, vtu14303
she had not designed suchstructures for more than10 years. She was
vtu14334
aware that there had been some changes to theBuilding Code in recent
years, but she was very familiar with the older code, and she argued
thatthe old code was likely to be over-conservative. To be certain that the
structure was safe, Engineer A increased the design loads required by the
code by an additional 10 percent, andprepared, signed, and sealed the
construction drawings.
The client submitted the drawings to the municipality for approval. Upon
inspection, themunicipal engineer immediately recognized that the
wording and style indicated that theengineer had followed the older
building code. Moreover, some load data required by the morerecent
building code was missing. The municipal engineer rejected the drawings.
The clientcomplained to the provincial Association.
Question: Should the Association discipline Engineer A for professional
misconduct?
15.
A small town hired Engineer A, a consulting mechanical engineer, todesign
a water system that would replace their small public-utility system, fed
from several wellswith water of doubtful quality. Engineer A proposed to
pump water from a nearby river that had an adequate flow all year, but
was subject to intermittent ice jams that, on the average, stoppedthe flow
for about 6 to 12 hours, once each winter. She proposed to overcome this
stoppage byconstructing a small reservoir, which pumps would keep filled.
This reservoir had a volumeequal to 48 hours’ consumption. The electric
power lines serving the area were subject to icingand power failures,
which occurred, on the average, for about 12 hours, once per year. vtu8672
EngineerA proposed to maintain power by installing a standby diesel vtu8718
generator in the pump-house so thatwhen line power was lost, the
vtu8742
generator would power the pumps. She presented the concept tothe
municipal Council, and the daily newspaper reported the story.
On reading the newspaper story, Engineer B, a chemical engineer with no
water supplyexperience, concluded that Engineer A was putting the
taxpayers (including him) to unnecessaryexpense by installing the standby
pumps. Engineer B reasoned that the 48 hours’ supply in thereservoir
would be more than adequate to take care of both the ice-dams in the river
and thepower supply failure, even if both occurred simultaneously.
Without getting in contact withEngineer A, he immediately wrote a
stinging letter to the municipal Council, with a copy to thenewspaper,
identifying himself as a Professional Engineer and criticizing what he
called“unnecessary and expensive duplication.” The letter closed with a
flippant comment questioningeither Engineer A’s honesty or competence.
The municipal Council discussed the letter and,since a qualified engineer
wrote it, the Council concluded that it would be politically unwise toignore
it. The Council voted to ask Engineer A to respond in writing to Engineer
B’s allegations.
Engineer A was surprised at this request from the Council, but felt obliged
to honour it. Shedropped all other tasks and summarized her calculations
in a report, which she had printed and
bound. She then returned to the municipal Council the following week and
explained herreliability calculations, which confirmed the configuration
that she was recommending. Sheexplained that, while the newspaper story
quoted average values, her calculations required“worst-case” probabilities.
Moreover, the local hospital depended on the water supply andrequired
higher reliability. In addition, it was indeed statistically probable that the
ice-jams and
power failures would occur simultaneously. Other pumping or piping
components might also failand prolong a water shortage, or the ice cover
on the reservoir might limit the flow available.
Moreover, the proposal included a contingency for town expansion during
the next 40 years. Itsoon became clear that Engineer A’s proposal was a
very reasonable solution to the problem.Engineer A calculated her
additional time and report preparation costs at about $5,000. Whileshe
expected her design to undergo public scrutiny, she did not expect an
uninformed attack froma fellow engineer. She knew that the Code of Ethics
required public opinions to be founded upon“adequate knowledge and
honest conviction,” so she called the provincial Association to askwhether
such thoughtless public criticism from Engineer B was unprofessional
conduct.
Question: Was the opinion in Engineer B’s letter founded upon “adequate
knowledge andhonest conviction,” as required by almost every Code of
Ethics? Is Engineer B guilty ofunprofessional conduct?
21.
Geologist A was a groundwater specialist, licensed and employed as
ageological consultant in several provinces. While working on a project to vtu9690
develop safe waterwells in a remote municipality, Geologist A was vtu9806
dismayed by several ignorant comments madeby the political candidate
vtu9914
running for election in that riding. The candidate made several rash
anduninformed statements about oil-, gas-, and water-well drilling and vtu9929
criticized the provincialministry responsible for monitoring these
activities. Among other demands, the candidate calledfor the abolition of
all regulations on well drilling, claiming that they caused needless delays in
developing the province’s resources. Geologist A recognized these
comments as absurd electionrhetoric, but was amazed by the number of
people who called radio talk shows and wrote lettersto the local
newspaper supporting this opinion. The editor of the newspaper also
wrote a stirringeditorial supporting the candidate’s position.
Geologist A, although very busy with the groundwater development,
nevertheless felt aprofessional obligation to correct these rash statements.
As a professional geoscientist, withmany years in this field, Geologist A
wrote a polite but factual letter to the newspaper, withcopies to the
candidate and to the party leader, explaining that, unless well drilling is
carefullycontrolled, dangerous pollution of the water table can occur. Oil
and gas can migrate from onestratum to another, and since drilling
operations usually include the injection of various fluids,such as drilling
“mud,” or salt water (to increase pressure and production), these fluids
couldmigrate to the water table as well. Since the municipality was seeking
to develop moregroundwater sources, such pollution was not an idle or
academic matter. Moreover, Geologist Aconcluded the letter by
emphasizing that unless well sites are carefully documented, including
precise locations and the collection of data from well logs, then this lack of
information wouldimpede the search for new resources. To improve
resource development, the province shouldengage more professionals to
examine methods of improving the monitoring process, thusmaintaining
control without impeding developers.
The newspaper published the letter, and future editorials did not mention
the issue again. Thepoliticians acknowledged the receipt of Geologist A’s
letter, without comment. The candidatewho had proposed the reduction in
drilling regulations was narrowly defeated in the election.
Question:Although Geologist A was licensed in the province on a temporary
permit, he was aresident of another province. As a non-resident geoscientist,
was it ethical of him to express anopinion on a technical topic during an
election, or was he meddling?