• Uphold the honor, integrity, and dignity of the profession;
  • Practice engineering in compliance with all legal requirements in the jurisdiction of practice;
  • Represent their professional qualifications and experience truthfully;
  • Reject practices of unfair competition;
  • Promote mentorship and knowledge-sharing equitably with current and future engineers;
  • Educate the public on the role of structural engineering in society;
  • Continue professional development to enhance their technical and non-technical competencies;
  • Act as faithful agents of their clients and employers with integrity and professionalism;
  • Make clear to clients and employers any real, potential, or perceived conflicts of interest;
  • Communicate in a timely manner to clients and employers any risks and limitations related to their work;
  • Present clearly and promptly the consequences to clients and employers if their engineering judgment is overruled where health, safety, and welfare of the public may be endangered;
  • Keep clients’ and employers’ identified proprietary information confidential;
  • Perform services only in areas of their competence;
  • Approve, sign, or seal only work products that have been prepared or reviewed by them or under their responsible charge;
  • Only take credit for professional work they have personally completed;
  • Provide attribution for the work of others;
  • Foster health and safety in the workplace;
  • Promote and exhibit inclusive, equitable, and ethical behavior in all engagements with colleagues;
  • Act with honesty and fairness on collaborative work efforts;
  • Encourage and enable the education and development of other structural engineers and prospective members of the profession;
  • Supervise equitably and respectfully;
  • Comment only in a professional manner on the work, professional reputation, and personal character of other structural engineers; and
  • Report violations of the Code of Ethics to the Professional Structural Engineers Association.