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Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP...

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MARCH E-NEWS Issue 65 2020 Protecting the public and setting the standard of engineering. A word from the Registrar BPEQ 90th Anniversary: Celebrating RPEQs and their achievements Milestone moment as BPEQ reaches 15,000 RPEQs Understanding Penalty Infringement Notices Infrastructure Priority List Update It’s time to renew
Transcript
Page 1: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

MARCH E-N

EWS

Issue 65 2020

Protecting the public and setting the standard of engineering.

A word from the Registrar

BPEQ 90th Anniversary: Celebrating RPEQs and their achievements

Milestone moment as BPEQ reaches 15,000 RPEQs

Understanding Penalty Infringement Notices

Infrastructure Priority List Update

It’s time to renew

Page 2: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

The Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is impacting many businesses and their capacity to provide customer service. The health and wellbeing of our customers, our staff and the wider community is our number one priority and BPEQ is taking measures to continue its functions but reduce the chances of spreading the disease, including:

• staff will commence working from home, withlimited staff remaining in the office to continue theBoard’s essential functions;

• BPEQ will use videoconferencing orteleconferencing for all essential future meetings,including Board meetings;

• customers are asked to submit paperwork (e.g.registration applications) by post and not attend the BPEQ office in person;

• any BPEQ hosted events or events it was participating will be cancelled or postponed;

• staff will not undertake any air travel for work purposes and will be encouraged to only undertakepersonal travel for essential reasons. Staff will follow the government’s 14-day quarantinerequirement for international travel, effective 16March 2020;

• staff are following Queensland Health’s requirements and BPEQ management is communicating regularly with staff includingextensive information around personal and workspace hygiene.

These measures will be in place until at least 6 April 2020. While every effort will be made to limit disruptions to RPEQs – especially during the renewal period – there may be delays in responding to questions and processing registration/renewal forms. We appreciate your patience and understanding during this time.

On the subject of renewals, RPEQs are encouraged to be renewal ready by having their contact details up to date. BPEQ will accept RPEQ registration renewals from 1 April 2020 through to 31 May 2020. As with last year RPEQs will renew their RPEQ registration online unless they declare a fitness to practice or continuing professional development issue. RPEQs who miss the 31 May 2020 renewal deadline

2BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

may have to pay additional fees to restore their registration on top of the standard renewal fee. More information on the renewal process can be found in this issue of the e-news and BPEQ will also distribute notices and reminders to all RPEQs through post, email and text.

Board members met earlier this month for the annual strategy meeting and developed a Strategic Plan for 2020-2024. The plan is framed around five new or revised strategic priorities, with supporting strategies and key performance indicators. The strategic priorities are:

• Professionalism and Standards – ensure that all professional engineering services meet the required standards, are compliant with the ProfessionalEngineers Act 2002 and we promote quality inprofessional development.

• Stronger Engagement – develop and maintain strongrelationships and engagement with all relevant stakeholders.

• Future Focused – understand the future trends, risks and opportunities to inform and develop existing and new professional engineering regulations and standards.

• Independence – continue to act independently,impartially and in the public interest.

• Governance and Risk – provide strong governancethat optimises organisational performance and themanagement of our risks.

The Board is committed to being open and transparent with RPEQs and other stakeholders and will report on these strategic priorities, strategies and key performance indicators through its annual report.

If we can provide further information or assistance, please contact BPEQ at [email protected] or call 07 3210 3100.

KAINE BARTON A/g Registrar

A WORD FROM THE REGISTRAR

Page 3: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

extraordinary series of large, successful EPC projects in Queensland during the boom years. Coal was king and companies went all out to maximise production by eliminating bottlenecks, expanding coal handling and preparation plants, and bringing new mines into production. For Thiess Kentz these projects were mainly in Central Queensland:

• Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05• Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06• Dawson Alliance (Moura Mine CHPP Upgrade), July

05 – Sept 07 • Lake Lindsay Alliance (German Creek CHPP Upgrade),

Sept 06 – Oct 08• Lake Vermont Coal Mine Infrastructure (greenfields),

Jan 08 – Oct 08

“I had the fortune to be involved in many extraordinary projects with many remarkable engineers and engineering leaders.”

As mining wound down with the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, Queensland’s mammoth public infrastructure projects took up the slack, including the Western Corridor scheme to strengthen South-East Queensland’s water grid in the face of severe drought conditions, where the Thiess Degremont joint venture designed and built the Bundamba Advanced Water Treatment Plant (June 07 – June 08) in record time.

In 2020, BPEQ turns 90. To celebrate this milestone BPEQ is acknowledging the achievements, projects, innovations, discoveries and stories of RPEQs past and present.

This month RPEQ Raul Barrera (Electrical, Mechanical, registered since 2008), talks about his experience as an electrical engineering working through the mining boom and the leadership examples set be fellow RPEQ Dan Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013).

The [mining] boom (which I shall call the years 2005-2008) was hard to appreciate at the time, but with the benefit of some 15 year’s perspective and additional experience it really does stand out as a remarkable time for the engineering profession. I had the fortune to be involved in many extraordinary projects with many remarkable engineers and engineering leaders. What sets the leaders apart in my mind is not only their technical expertise and professional standards, but their ability to bring the best out of their people.

I joined Thiess Kentz Pty Ltd in 2006 for the Dawson Mine project. The company was part of the Thiess group and looked after the electrical aspects (‘vertical slice’) for their

BPEQ 90th ANNIVERSARY

CELEBRATING RPEQS AND THEIR ACHIEVEMENTS

3BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

Pictured: RPEQ Dan Houghton

(Electrical, registered since 2013)

Page 4: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

The project was ranked number one in Engineers Australia’s ‘Engineering Wonders of Queensland’ publication in 2009. As a founding partner of Voltex Power Engineers, I moved onto the landmark Airport Link Tunnel and Northern Busway project (July 08 - July 12).

Thiess Kentz’s Engineering Coordinator at the time was a local Queensland product, Dan Houghton. In addition to prime engineering responsibility on some of these projects (Saraji & Bundamba), Dan built the engineering team, filled all sorts of gaps in all the projects, and was a key link between designers, constructors and field engineers. Dan had a way of working with people that earned him great respect and brought the very best out of us all. He led by example – working diligently, to an uncompromising professional standard and accepting nothing less from others. He saw and respected engineers as people and professionals, when many seemed to think we were problems! He appreciated and used our strengths and understood and managed our weaknesses.

Dan has contributed to the development of the engineering profession and the state of Queensland through his constructive contributions in numerous significant projects.

4BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

This year is a celebration of the achievements, projects, innovations, discoveries and stories of RPEQs past and present.  BPEQ encourages RPEQs to share their thoughts –

• What are some of Queensland’s great engineering feats?

• Who was the RPEQ/s who helped deliver theproject?

• Are there unsung heroes in the profession?

To have your say contact BPEQ at [email protected].

MILESTONEMOMENTAS BPEQ REACHES 15,000 RPEQSSince the introduction of the original Professional Engineers Act in 1929, 23,894 engineers have been awarded the RPEQ title. In 2019, Lidia Novoseltseva was registered, taking the current active total of RPEQs to 15,000 for the first time.

Lidia is a Petroleum Engineer with over 15 years of upstream oil and gas experience. She began her career with Schlumberger and worked on artificial lift and production optimisation projects in the United Kingdom and Russia before relocating to and settling in in Australia. For the past 9 years, Lidia has worked as a Senior Production Engineer at Santos Ltd and has been involved in a range of projects focusing on enhancing and optimising the performance of producing oil and gas assets. In November 2019, she obtained her Chartered Engineer and then RPEQ status.

The RPEQ title (and other variations of the title) is legally protected and can only be used by qualified and competent professional engineers.

To find out more about registration as a RPEQ visit www.bpeq.qld.gov.au/registration/become-a-rpeq/

Pictured: Lidia Novoseltseva

Page 5: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

5

UNDERSTANDING PENALTY INFRINGEMENT NOTICES

Penalty Infringement Notices were introduced in the Professional Engineers Regulation 2019 and commenced on 1 January 2020.

CURRENT POWERS AVAILABLE TO THE BOARDThe Professional Engineers Act 2002 (Act) provides for the following options to the Board of Professional Engineers of Queensland (Board) to promote compliance with the legislation:

• enter into an undertaking agreed with the registered professional engineer

• caution or reprimand the registered professional engineer or other person;

• impose a condition agreed to by the registered professional engineer on their registration;

• suspend or cancel a registered professional engineer’s registration;

• start a disciplinary proceeding against the registered professional engineer by applying to the Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal, which can on a finding of guilt:

▫ impose a fine;

▫ reprimand the registered professional engineer; or

▫ cancel the registration of a registered professional engineer; and/or

▫ disqualify the person from re-applying for registration for a stated period of time;

y initiate a prosecution for an offence under the Act.

PENALTY INFRINGEMENT NOTICESA Penalty Infringement Notice (PIN) is a notice or ticket imposing a fine that is usually issued on the spot, or sent by email or post, for a less serious or less complex offence. Schedule 1 of the State Penalties Enforcement Regulation 2014 prescribes the offences in the Act for which PINs may be issued and the fines that may be imposed by those PINs. A PIN may only be issued for an offence that is prescribed as an infringement notice offence under the State Penalties Enforcement Regulation 2014.

Offences for which PINs can be issued under the Act are listed in Appendix A. Currently a penalty unit equates to a fine of $133.45 as of 1 July 2019. This is likely to increase on 1 July every year.

A PIN provides the Board an alternative to prosecution through the court system. A PIN invites an alleged offender to discharge their potential liability for an offence by paying a fine, as opposed to having the matter dealt with by a court.

If, however, the person wishes to contest the alleged offence, or the penalty imposed by the PIN, they can elect to have the matter dealt with in the Queensland Magistrates Court.

The PIN system provides the Board with a swift and inexpensive means of addressing particular offences that would otherwise be required to be dealt with by means of costly and time-consuming prosecutions. Offenders benefit from a fixed and discounted penalty for the offence, avoidance of court proceedings and no finding of guilt in relation to the offence.

It is not mandatory for the Board to use PINs, and the Board will always consider the full range of options available for promoting compliance with the legislation and the most appropriate response to the alleged conduct.

DECISIONS ABOUT ISSUING PINSIn making decisions about issuing a PIN to a person for a breach of an offence provision in the Act, the Board will consider all the available evidence and decide whether issuing the PIN is in the public interest and preferable to taking other action in relation to the offence.

Generally, the Board will consider the following in respect of any decision:

• whether the breach is minor in nature;

• whether the scale of the impact is known and small;

• whether imposing a PIN is likely to have a punitive effect; and

• whether the PIN is likely to act as a deterrent.

The Board will never consider a PIN if the Board considers the conduct is a major breach of the Act.

BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

Page 6: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

6BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

APPENDIX A - PIN OFFENCES

Professional Engineers Act 2002Infringement Notice Offence Infringement

Notice Fine (Penalty Units)

s32 s32 Notification about particular matter

A registered professional engineer must, within 21 days after changing his or her name or contact details, advise the Board about the change unless the engineer has a reasonable excuse.

1

s32A (1) s32A Notification of disciplinary action by other bodies

(1) A registered professional engineer must advise the Board about any disciplinary action (the event) taken against the engineer in another State or a foreign country in relation to the engineer's practice as an engineer, within 21 days after the event, unless the engineer has a reasonable excuse.

Maximum penalty–50 penalty units.

(2) For subsection (1) it is immaterial whether or not the disciplinary action happened under a law of the other State or country, or under the rules of an association of professional engineers.

5

s32C (2) s32C Amending or replacing certificates of registration after certain conditions imposed

(1) This section applies if–

(a) a registered professional engineer receives a warning notice under section 27 A; or

(b) the tribunal makes an order imposing a condition on the engineer's registration.

(2) The engineer must return the engineer's certificate of registration to the Board within 21 days after receiving the warning notice or the tribunal makes the order, unless the engineer has a reasonable excuse.

Maximum penalty–50 penalty units.

5

s54 s54 Failure to return identity card

An individual who ceases to be an investigator must return the individual's identity card to the Board within 21 days after ceasing to be an investigator, unless the individual has a reasonable excuse.

Maximum penalty–10 penalty units.

1

s56 (1) s56 Offences

(1) A person required to give information to the Board or an investigator under section 55 must comply with the requirement unless the person has a reasonable excuse.

Maximum penalty–50 penalty units.

5

s56 (2) (2) A person given a notice under section 55 must not fail, without reasonable excuse–(a) to attend as required by the notice; or

(b) to continue to attend as required by the Board or investigator until excused from further attendance; or

(c) to answer a question the person is required to answer by the board or investigator; or

(d) to produce a document the person is required to produce by the notice.

Maximum penalty–50 penalty units.

5

Page 7: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

7BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

Infringement Notice Offence cont. Infringement Notice Fine (Penalty Units) cont.

s67 (1) (Other than an offence that constitues an assault on an investigator)

s67 Obstructing board or investigators

(1) A person must not obstruct the Board in its exercise of a power in the conduct of an investigation, or an investigator in the exercise of a power, unless the person has a reasonable excuse.

Maximum penalty–100 penalty units.

5

s113 (1) s113 Claims about being a registered professional engineer

(1) A person who is not a registered professional engineer must not–

(a) claim, or hold himself or herself out, to be a registered professional engineer; or

(b) allow himself or herself to be held out as a registered professional engineer.

20

s113 (2) (2) A person must not hold out another person as a registered professional engineer if the person knows or ought reasonably to know the other person is not a registered professional engineer.

Maximum penalty–1000 penalty units.

20

s114 s114 Using titles or names

A person who is not a registered professional engineer must not use–

(a) the titles 'registered professional engineer', 'registered professional engineer of Queensland' or 'RPEQ'; or

(b) another title or name, prescribed under a regulation, that in the context in which the title or name is used suggests that the person is a registered professional engineer.

Maximum penalty–1000 penalty units.

20

s115 (1) s115 Who may carry out professional engineering services

(1) A person who is not a practising professional engineer must not carry out professional engineering services.

Maximum penalty–1000 penalty units.

(2) However, a person does not commit an offence under subsection (1) if the person carries out the professional engineering services under the direct supervision of a practising professional engineer who is responsible for the services.

20

s115 (3) (3) A person who is a practising professional engineer must not carry out professional engineering services in an area of engineering other than an area of engineering for which the person is registered under this Act.

Maximum penalty–1000 penalty units.

(4) However, a person does not commit an offence under subsection (3) if the person carries out the professional engineering services under the direct supervision of a practising professional engineer who is registered in the area of engineering and responsible for the services.

(5) For this section, a person carries out professional engineering services under the direct supervision of a practising professional engineer only if the engineer directs the person in the carrying out of the services and oversees and evaluates the carrying out of the services by the person.

Note–

See also section 6A in relation to the potential application of this section outside Queensland.

20

Page 8: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

8BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

2020INFRASTRUCTURE PRIORITY LIST

A network of deep water ports will be needed to accommodate larger container ships.

Image courtesy of Port of Brisbane Pty Ltd

The 2020 Infrastructure Priority List has been released by Infrastructure Australia with identified national and state projects and initiatives valued at $58 billion.

Proposals on the Infrastructure Priority List are divided into two broad groups:

• Projects are advanced proposals that have a full business case, which Infrastructure Australia has assessed as capable of addressing a nationally significant problem or opportunity and delivering robust economic, social or environmental outcomes. Projects remain on the Priority List until delivery or construction begins.

• Initiatives are proposals that Infrastructure Australia has determined have the potential to address a nationally significant problem or opportunity. Infrastructure Australia includes them on the Priority List to indicate that further development and rigorous assessment of these proposals is a national priority.

Projects and initiatives are either given high priority or priority status from Infrastructure Australia.

A national electric vehicle fast charging network has been identified by Infrastructure Australia as near-term high priority initiative. Electric vehicles are expected to make up at least 70 per cent of all new vehicles sales by 2040. Infrastructure to service electric vehicles, particularly fast charging stations, is largely lacking outside of major cities. While the Queensland Government has invested in fast charging stations along the coast there are no fast charging stations inland.

Another nationally significant project identified by Infrastructure Australia is east coast deep water container port capacity. This is a longer-term priority initiative but is likely to become more important as container ships increase

in size and capacity. At present no Australian port can accommodate the largest container ships.

In Queensland newly added priority projects include:

• Gold Coast Light Rail Stage 3

• M1 Pacific Motorway upgrades

▫ Eight Miles Plains to Daisy Hill

▫ Varsity Lakes to Tugun

• Bruce Highway upgrades

▫ Deception Bay Road Interchange

▫ Caboolture-Bribie Island Road to Steve Irwin Way

▫ Maroochydore Road Interchange

▫ Cooroy to Curra Section D: Woodum to Curra

▫ Cairns Southern Access Corridor State 3: Edmonton to Gordonvale

• Peak Downs Highway Realignment

Only one high priority project in Queensland has been added – Queensland national land transport network maintenance. The Brisbane Metro remains on the list as a high priority project.

The Broadbeach to Burleigh Heads public transport connectivity project has graduated from priority initiative to a priority project.

Visit https://www.infrastructureaustralia.gov.au/sites/default/files/2020-03/2020_infrastructure_priority_list_low_resolution_-_updated.pdf to view the full 2020 Infrastructure Priority List.

Page 9: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

KEY DATES RPEQ registration expires 30 June 2020

The renewal period is 1 April 2020 - 31 May 2020

Your renewal must be completed and submitted, and payment made by 31 May 2020

Your RPEQ registration will be active for 12 months from 1 July 2020 - 30 June 2021

9BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

IT'S TIMETO RENEW

For online renewal, a declaration form must be read and accepted. Under the Professional Engineers Act 2002, it is an offence to state anything on the form that you know is ‘false or misleading in a material particular’. BPEQ may cancel registration where it has reasonable grounds to believe that the person has been registered because of a materially false or misleading representation.

STEP 1

STEP 2

STEP 3

STEP 4

STEP 5

VISIT

SIGN IN

CLICK

ANSWER

COMPLETE

Visit www.bpeq.qld.gov.au

Sign in by clicking the My Account tab

Click the Renew Now option

Answer the online renewal questions

Choose payment option and make payment

5-STEP ONLINE RENEWAL PROCESS To complete the 5-step online renewal process, registrants must be able to answer:

• YES to either question one (1) or question two (2) of the continuing professional development (CPD) questions (Section C); and

• NO to ALL fitness to practice (FTP) questions (Section D).

Applicants who have not complied with CPD requirements and/or declare a FTP issue should contact BPEQ.

2020/21 REGISTRATION FEES

$232.75RPEQ Practising

1 April -31 May

1 July -31 August

$295.80

$179.40$116.35RPEQNon-Practising

Direct DebitComplete a Direct Debit Request Form (available in My Account). Provide completed Direct Debit Request Form along with Tax Invoice to

[email protected]

or post to:

PO Box 15213 CITY EAST QLD 4002

PAYMENT OPTIONSAfter answering the online renewal questions, you have two (2) payment options:

Pay nowPay now through My Account using a credit card.

Pay later

Credit CardProvide credit card details along with Tax Invoice to

[email protected]

or post to:

PO Box 15213 CITY EAST QLD 4002

Please note that only payments by VISA or Mastercard are accepted.

Page 10: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

Evidence that you are currently chartered (or equivalent) with one of BPEQ’s approved assessment entities.

If you are changing from Non-Practising to Practising, you must also provide the following information with your renewal application form:

Evidence that you have undertaken at least 150 hours of structured CPD in the previous five (5) years.

or

CHANGING YOUR REGISTRATION TYPEApplicants changing their registration type should contact BPEQ to obtain a renewal application form.

If you are changing from Practising to Non-Practising you simply need to tick the ‘Non-Practising’ box on the renewal application form.

10BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

Page 11: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

11

CELEBRATING 90 YEARS OF BPEQQUEENSLAND FROM THE 30’s TO NOW

All images sourced from John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland

Flinders Street, Townsville(Circa 1932)

Bert Hinklers Avro Avian

Town Reeach, Brisbane River and Customs House, Queen Street, Brisbane(Circa 1932)

Railway Station Kuranda, NQ(Circa 1935)

Aerial view of the Brisbane central business district (Circa 1934)

A decorate engine at the Railway Picnic, Bundaberg

(1931)

BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

Page 12: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

QUEENSLAND’S GREATEST ENGINEERING FEATAs part of its 90th Anniversary BPEQ is recognising engineering projects designed, built or operated from 1930 until now that have left a mark on Queensland.

We want your vote to come up with the top Queensland engineering feat. You can vote from our list of projects or suggest your own.

To vote click the following link: https://bit.ly/2PiKwaV

The Story Bridge (Circa 1940) Source: John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland

• Brisbane City Hall

• Burdekin Falls Dam

• Burnett River Bridge

• Fairbairn Dam

• Hornibrook Highway Bridge

• Kuranda Scenic Railway

• Mount Isa Mine

• Mount Morgan Mine

• Old Museum (Brisbane)

• Q1 (Gold Coast)

• Sir Leo Hielscher Bridges (Gateway)

• St John’s Cathedral (Brisbane)

• Story Bridge

• St Stephen’s Cathedral (Brisbane)

• Toowoomba Second Range Crossing

• Weipa Mine

12BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

Page 13: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

TO OUR NEWEST RPEQSWELCOME

BPEQ extends a warm welcome to the following engineers who recently became registered:

ElieJackFareed

RamiFareedWahalathantrigeMichaelRodrigoWarrenScottGaryDanielDarrenIanKirrynAmandineConSanel

JohnDouglasReneJaniceConrad

CraigHarikumarEmad

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13BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

Page 14: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

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14BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

Page 15: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

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15BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020

Page 16: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

16The Board of Professional Engineers Newsletter, Issue 63 January 2020

TAKE THE SURVEY AND

GET THE FREE 2020

ENGINEERS REPORT.

GET INSIDE KNOWLEDGE

ON YOUR PAY, INDUSTRY

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CONDITIONS.

Be a part of the leading engineering report since 1974 and findout what you are worth in 2020.

CLICK HERE TOTAKE OUR SURVEY

2020 ENGINEERS SALARY SURVEYAs a participant, you’ll be the first to have access to the Summary ofFindings, a valuable document to have on-hand to know how your salary andremuneration package stacks up against other professional engineers. Allentries in the surveyare confidential. The survey will close on April 26th 2020.

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/EngRem20BPEQ

Page 17: Issue 65 MARCH - bpeq.qld.gov.au · •Houghton (Electrical, registered since 2013). Saraji CHPP Upgrade, Dec 04 – Dec 05 • Hail Creek Expansion, Dec 04 – Feb 06 • Dawson

Don’t forget BPEQ is on LinkedIn and Twitter. To keep up to date with the latest news and events from BPEQ or to start a discussion on registration or engineering issues generally, click FOLLOW.

CONNECT WITH BPEQON LINKEDIN AND TWITTER

[email protected]

(07) 3210 3100

www.bpeq.qld.gov.au

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PO Box 15213 CITY EAST QLD 4002

This newsletter is provided for general information only. It is not legal advice and should not be taken or relied upon as such. If you have any questions or concerns about your compliance with the Professional Engineers Act 2002 (Qld) or your general legal obligations as an engineer, you should obtain appropriate legal advice. The Board accepts no legal responsibility or liability for any loss you may suffer as a result of reliance upon the information contained in this newsletter.

17

Protecting the public and setting the standard of engineering.

BPEQ E-news Issue 65 March 2020


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