|
THE STORY OF THE LAND
SURVEYOR'S COUNCIL
Improving the Security of Boundaries in the
United States
On November 20, 1992 in Daytona Beach, Florida,
approximately 25 concerned professionals formed the Florida Land Surveyor's
Council as a division of the American Surveyors and Mappers Council.
The Land Surveyor's Council has now expanded into other states and exists
for the purpose of improving the security of boundaries in the United States by
using all legal methods necessary to defeat any attempt to remove or relax the
requirement for a competent land survey by a registered, licensed land surveyor
on any real property being used for the purpose of conveyancing or collateral
for any loan whatsoever. Each State Land Surveyor's Council is part of
the national movement by the Land Surveyor's Council to liberate land
surveyors and to recover the respect and dignity we deserve as land surveyors
together with the increased fees necessary to produce a high quality survey.
THE MISSION OF THE LAND SURVEYOR'S COUNCIL
-
To protect and further the profession of land
surveying against attacks from any quarter.
-
To address and take appropriate action on any
issues which come up which impact on the profession of land surveying.
-
To continue work to stop the use of the
"Owner's Survey Affidavit and Indemnification Agreement."
-
To provide training to the profession
necessary to facilitate survival of our profession and to educate, not
alienate, the other members of the title industry.
-
To work with other groups who are committed
to improve and protect the profession of land surveying.
-
To cause a requirement for a current boundary
survey on every conveyance, financing or re-financing of real property.
-
To cause a land survey to only be considered
"current" for a maximum of 90 days following the completion of the field
work and the title insurance industry not to remove the "Survey Exception"
in Schedule 'B' of the title policy unless they are in possession of a
current survey.
-
To cause any land surveyor who agrees to be
hired on the basis of a lower price be forced to pay treble damages in the
event that Minimum Technical Standards are not met.
-
To cause the Land Surveyors Board of
Registration to identify the practice of using the "Owner's Survey Affidavit
and Indemnification Agreement" as the "unauthorized and illegal practice of
land surveying" and the Insurance Commission to forbid the practice.
REDUCTION IN THE POOL OF QUALIFIED SURVEYING
TECHNICIANS
The insidious down-sizing of the land surveying
profession over the past 20 years has caused the total number of people employed
in the profession today to be to ¼ those employed in 1972 and the numbers are
declining fast. Here are some of the reasons for this drastic reduction in our
ranks:
-
It is now possible to do five times more work
with a two man field crew and modern equipment than could be done with a
three man field crew in 1972. 15 surveying field employees were required in
1972 to equal two of today's surveying employees.
-
Micro-computers, since 1980, have grown in
size at approximately 50% per year and increased in speed at approximately
75% per year. As computers get bigger and faster, Computer Assisted Drafting
and Design (CADD) has become increasingly more automated such that CADD in
now routinely performed in the field.
-
One CADD draftsman can now support up to
three field crews. In 1972, each field crew required at least one draftsman
for office support. In other words, since each field crew can do five times
the work of a 1972 field crew, 15 draftsmen would have been required in 1972
to equal a CADD draftsman today.
LOSS OF SURVEYING MARKETS
While the above analysis discusses the loss of
surveying employees, the simultaneous loss of surveying markets is even more
alarming:
-
At the current attrition rate, it appears
that the need for land surveyors will continue to decline during this decade
at the rate of approximately 20% per year.
-
The "Baby Boom" is over and, therefore,
development surveying is either gone or rapidly on the way out.
-
The construction industry has successfully
campaigned for the right to perform their own surveying. GPS and GIS will
facilitate that activity within the next five years so that construction
surveying will no longer exist as a market.
-
GPS equipment, mathematics and techniques,
combined with Inertial Navigation equipment and techniques in a hybrid
instrument will soon make it possible for everyone (including non-surveyors)
to know with great accuracy their exact property location.
-
Photogrammetric technology has progressed and
continues to progress at such a rapid rate that major topographic mapping no
longer exists as a market for land surveyors.
-
Within this decade, GIS will provide a
cadastre which will identify each property corner by coordinate and will
cause boundary surveying to be obsolete, but the mapping for GIS has been
taken over in large part by major providers of cartographic services and
photogrammetrists.
MEMBERSHIP IN THE LAND SURVEYOR’S COUNCIL
Membership in the Land Surveyor's Council
does not preclude membership in any State Land Surveyors Society or the
American Congress on Surveying and Mapping. Members of those organizations
are welcome. Some State Societies are currently acting to set up Liaison
Committees with us.
The time has come to actually do something about
surveying problems as opposed to standing by and watching surveyors lose their
entire market while the public gets injured. The potentially fraudulent use of
the "Owner's Affidavit of Survey and Indemnification Agreement" being
promulgated by title insurance companies is one such example. Further, some
property owners are being misled to believe that their boundaries are secure and
obtaining no survey at all!
To more fully serve the profession and those
working to make land surveying their lifetime career, we welcome non-registered
as well as registered persons to hold full membership in the Land Surveyor's
Council. In addition to party chiefs and other surveying technicians, we also
welcome our brothers and sisters in the real estate appraisal profession who are
being asked to appraise property without benefit of survey. Members of the legal
profession are also urged to join with us to make a difference in the land
surveying profession. Our membership today contains professional land surveyors,
non-registered owners of land surveying firms, party chiefs, draftsmen, and
others. We cordially invite you to join the Land Surveyor's Council.
Ted Madson, Executive
Director
|