Who Files Complaints Against New Jersey Engineers
In New Jersey, complaints against engineers are filed with the New Jersey State Board of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors. Complaints can come from many sources — every New Jersey board accepts written complaints from the public:
- Clients and project owners
- Public agencies and building officials
- Other engineers (mandatory reporting in many states)
- Whistleblowers and contractors
- Insurance carriers after a claim
Common Ethics Violations New Jersey Engineers Face
- Sealing or signing plans not prepared under direct supervision
- Negligent design leading to failure or safety risk
- Practicing outside area of competence
- Conflicts of interest on public projects
- Failure to report code violations or unsafe conditions
- Misrepresentation of credentials
- Unlicensed practice or holding out as a PE without licensure
- Plan-stamping for unlicensed designers
How New Jersey Engineer Investigations Work
Once the New Jersey State Board of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors dockets a complaint against a New Jersey engineer, the process moves through several stages:
- Notice and demand for response. You receive written notice from the New Jersey State Board of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors with a deadline — usually 20–30 days — to file a sworn written response. This document becomes part of the permanent record.
- Document discovery. The New Jersey State Board of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors can issue subpoenas for records — files, billing, prescriptions, communications.
- Witness interviews. Investigators interview the complainant, colleagues, and other witnesses.
- Probable cause review. A panel decides whether to file formal charges. The New Jersey State Board of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors may also seek interim restrictions or summary suspension.
- Negotiated resolution or hearing. Most cases resolve through a consent agreement before formal hearing.
- Final order and appeal. The board issues a final order, appealable to the New Jersey courts.
New Jersey-Specific Context
New Jersey is the only state with a centralized Office of Attorney Ethics that supervises district ethics committees statewide, and random trust-account audits under R. 1:21-6 are a uniquely aggressive enforcement mechanism.
Consequences of an Upheld Complaint
State engineering boards can impose civil penalties, mandate continuing education, censure, suspend, or revoke the PE license. Many actions are reported to NCEES and the Council Records Program, which affects licensure in every other state.
In New Jersey, sanctions imposed by the New Jersey State Board of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors are reported to national clearinghouses and to every other state where you hold or seek a license.
Don't Respond Alone.
Free, confidential consultation for New Jersey engineers. We will tell you what the New Jersey State Board of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors can and cannot do, what your real exposure is, and what your response should look like.