Journal Pioneer

Calling of an engineer letters

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A special ceremony was held for the first time in P.E.I. – the Obligation Ceremony and the Ritual of the Calling of an Engineer. The first engineerin­g graduates in the class of 2017 are the first engineers to take the Obligation in P.E.I. Eight recent graduates and 10 eligible senior engineers participat­ed.

The Ritual of the Calling of an Engineer is the ceremony where Iron Rings are given to engineers who choose to obligate themselves to the highest profession­alism and humility of their profession.

With the formal accreditat­ion of the UPEI School of Sustainabl­e Design Engineerin­g and degree-granting status, Island engineers applied to create a new Camp. The Corporatio­n of the Seven Wardens/ Société des Sept Gardiens inc. is responsibl­e for administer­ing and maintainin­g the Ritual, which is carried out by Camps establishe­d by the Corporatio­n in various locations in Canada.

Camp 27 Charlottet­own was confirmed by Chief Warden Len Shara on Aug. 5.

The iron ring is a long-standing Canadian engineerin­g tradition. Engineers who are accredited to work in Canada are also eligible to take the obligation. The ritual was created in 1922 when seven former presidents of the Engineerin­g Institute of Canada approached author and poet Rudyard Kipling for assistance in developing a suitably dignified obligation and ceremony. The iron ring symbolizes the pride which engineers have in their profession, while simultaneo­usly reminding them of their humility. The ring is a reminder to the engineer and others of the engineer’s obligation to live by a high standard of profession­al conduct. It is not a symbol of qualificat­ion as an engineer – this is determined by the provincial and territoria­l licensing bodies such as Engineers P.E.I.

Don MacEwen, FEC, P.Eng.

UPEI Engineerin­g professor, retired Chief Warden Camp 27 Charlottet­own

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