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Posted By Administration,
Thursday, August 9, 2018
Updated: Wednesday, August 8, 2018
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Why should we support the Certified Survey Technician (CST) Program?
With the declining number of Registered Professional Land Surveyors in the work force, the amounts of work performed by technicians will be increasing. To increase the work flow through a surveyor’s office, the quality and correctness of the technicians work must be increased for efficiency and profitability. The CST program provides a career ladder and credentials for these technicians.
How can we increase the implication of the Certified Survey Technician Program?
The employer through his supervisory personnel can lead with in-house training or support from your local Chapter. Training and testing needs to be introduced to your existing technicians. Surveyors will discover quickly which technicians have the drive to improve their knowledge and add value to the company. Each TSPS chapter should have a committee supporting, teaching, and/or leading self-study classes and support groups. TSPS has prepared classes for the support of the CST Program which are available to all chapters. The CST classes have typically been taught at the symposium once a year. Testing needs to available at each chapter and at least twice a year. The CST test has been given at seven sites with approximately 50 students this year. I would like to see this numbers doubled in the next test cycle.
When should applications for testing be summited?
An application for the CST testing can be found at the TSPS or the NSPS websites. The application deadline is two weeks prior to the next scheduled exam of September 9, 2017. Applications must be mailed to NSPS CST Program, Attn: Sara Maggi at 5119 Pegasus Court, Suite Q, Frederick, MD 21704. More certified and registered proctors are needed across the state. See the TSPS web site for additional information.
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Posted By Administration,
Thursday, August 9, 2018
Updated: Wednesday, August 8, 2018
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TSPS: How/why did you get into surveying?
Richard: I attended the summer surveying camp at Texas A&M University, where we were taken out of the classroom and given field and office tasks typical to a professional land surveying firm. The degree of precision required in the field and the research required for boundary construction in the office intrigued me, and it was apparent that each project would be unique and pose a new set of challenges. Because of this experience, it was evident that a career in land surveying would never be uninteresting. I was hired by Jon Hodde in 2009, and the experience gained under his mentorship was extremely beneficial. Making daily decisions to do your job the right way or the wrong way becomes habitual, and following Jon’s example allowed me to know the difference.
TSPS: Why did you join TSPS?
Richard: After being hired on as a survey technician at Hodde & Hodde Land Surveying in Brenham, I began meeting several TSPS members through networking. I realized that TSPS members not only care about the current state of the profession, but also strive to ensure that the future of land surveying is bright. I then began to make efforts to surround myself with surveyors that had this mentality, and have enjoyed the experience ever since.
TSPS: What is your most memorable surveying moment?
Richard: Jon and I were in the field one day finishing a survey while trying to beat an incoming thunderstorm. We were about a mile walk from the truck when we completed the field work, and the storm was on top of us. We could see lightning beginning to strike between us and the truck, so we were on alert. At a certain point, we both saw a red blast of light, felt the ground shake, and the next thing we knew, we were both on the ground looking at each other, not knowing what had happened. We then noticed that a giant oak tree about 50 feet away from us was black and smoking at the top from a lightning strike, which kicked off the series of events. Needless to say, we were relieved to get back in the truck and on the way back to the office.
Richard's Favorites:
Color: Maroon
Food: Ribeye Steak
Animal: My Pyrador dog, Paige
Singer/Band/Group: Anything 80's or 90's and Country Music
Hobbies: Spending time on my family ranch in Lampasas County
Richard is currently the TSPS Chapter 20 - Brazos Valley President and works for Railroad Infrastructure & Terminal Development, LLC in Brookshire, TX.

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Posted By Administration,
Wednesday, June 6, 2018
Updated: Monday, June 4, 2018
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TSPS: How/why did you get into surveying?
Brandon: I learned about surveying during an internship at the Lower Colorado River Authority while going to school at UT in Austin. While working I realized surveying involved parts of other disciplines I had interest in, including history, engineering, law, GIS, and technology. Another great advantage I saw in surveying was the flexibility to choose how much time a person could spend in the field versus the office. The quality of other professionals in the field helped seal the deal on my decision to pursue a career in surveying, their friendliness and helpfulness stood out among other career choices I had considered and really aided in my decision.
TSPS: Why did you join TSPS?
Brandon: TSPS provides many benefits for its members, but more than anything I wanted to support an organization that promotes surveying to the public. Also, surveying seems to be an often overlooked career choice by many and TSPS helps to inform the public and youth on what a surveyor does to attract new recruits into the surveying profession. One of the best advantages to joining TSPS is the networking it provides, allowing surveyors to come together and share knowledge and learn from each other.
TSPS: What is your most memorable surveying moment?
Brandon: Finding old original monuments has been something I have always found intriguing because of the unique history behind the monument and knowing what the surveyors would have endured to set them during those early times in Texas' history. I decided to pull some of the original patents for some family land near my house and try my hand at searching for some of the old corners, knowing most, if not all will be long destroyed. After a lot of research and several evenings walking through the woods looking for other corners, I finally found an original witness tree with an X blazed into it by a surveyor in 1854, my oldest to date. The mark is on the aptly named "Big Brushy Creek" and I spent the next half hour chopping yaupons out of the way so I could get a quality picture. I consider myself a very young surveyor and I expect many more memorable experiences to happen in the future.
Brandon's Favorites:
Color: Burnt Orange
Food: Chinese
Animal: Labrador Retriever
Singer: Ray Wylie Hubbard
Hobbies: Hunting (especially turkeys), fishing, and spending time with my wife and 2 year old son
Brandon is currently the TSPS Chapter 14 - Guadalupe Valley President and works for CivilCorp, LLC in Victoria, TX.

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Posted By Robby Christopher, LSLS,
Wednesday, June 6, 2018
Updated: Monday, June 4, 2018
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This past April, the High Plains Experience boundary retracement seminar (HPE) held its 8th annual class in the Texas Panhandle on the historic LIT Ranch near Channing. This ranch makes for a great training locale, having original surveys and retracement surveys made by several well known 19th and early 20th century surveyors such as Summerfield, Munson, Mabry, Twichell and including several types of surveys such as Capital leagues, tracts sold under the 50-cent Act, sections, river sections, and the Canadian River for gradient boundary classes to boot. It’s the perfect training ground and its rich history and scenic rolling hills always have me looking forward to a break from my office routine and my desk to relight the fire of boundary surveying that runs through my veins. The opportunity to share knowledge and learn from other great surveyors always takes me back to the days when I was young and eager to learn everything I could about this profession that I fell in love with. Late night round-table discussions with maps and field notes spread out and both old and young looking on, cussing and discussing the virtues of those that came before us set the stage for the classes and field exercises that await us, it truly is an experience for land surveyors at every level.
There are others; Brady, Concan, and I’m sure the instructors for those all feel the same way I do. There’s a passion about land surveying that brings out the best in all of us. The curiosity, the intellect, the desire to solve the puzzle of the original footsteps, the complexity of the legal issues, the detective in us is inescapably drawn to it.
The HPE was the brainchild of Craig Alderman. I first met Craig many years ago. I don’t even remember exactly when, but he seemed quiet. Friendly, but just a nice guy that came to the board meetings. Craig lived in Midland, which is close to Lubbock, where I live, at least in terms of the size of Texas, but our paths didn’t cross too often. Over the years, Craig got more and more involved in TSPS. He became a Chapter President, then the West Texas Area Director, and I started seeing him doing a lot of committee work at the state level. Before I knew it, Craig was working very hard, mostly behind the scenes, but he seemed to be everywhere at TSPS meetings and functions. I began to develop a strong respect for his work ethic. It was showing.
Then, one day, Craig called me up and he had this wild notion of doing a 3-day seminar, one similar to the ones being done down state. He wanted a group of Licensed State Land Surveyors from this area to give a seminar showcasing the pioneer surveyors of West Texas. When he asked me if I’d team up with Stan Piper, Maxey Sheppard, and Michel Newton, it was a no-brainer…I said, “I’m in.”
J.D. Davis, LSLS, a HPE instructor from Amarillo had been doing some survey work on the LIT Ranch for Bill O’Brien, the owner. Bill is a history buff and a bit of an amateur surveyor who loves the lore of the land. J.D. had developed a good relationship with Bill and when he spoke to him about our idea, he granted us permission to use his ranch for the seminar. What I had thought would be impossible started to take shape. This thing was going to happen!
Anyone who’s ever been an instructor or a seminar speaker knows the preparation that goes into that and we all worked hard to get our classes teachable, but the logistics of putting together a successful seminar like HPE are enormous. Craig had a vision though, and in his true fashion, behind the scenes, he worked tirelessly to make it exactly as he had envisioned. We joked about how Craig would crack the whip on us to get things done. Not only was he making arrangements for lodging, classrooms, meals, skeet shoots, supplies, registration, etc., he was out in the field on the ranch with his GPS looking for original monuments for us to use in our classes. When it was time for the seminar to start, all we had to do was show up and teach. We have other team members for support, but Craig was behind all of it.
We all knew Craig worked hard to make our HPE run smoothly, we just didn’t realize how hard…..until this year.
Craig lost his battle with cancer in July of 2017. At his last HPE only a few weeks earlier, we knew he didn’t feel well, but he wouldn’t show it. It was just part of his character. We gave Craig an award at that time, all of us hoping for the best but fearing the worst. When Craig passed, we lost a valuable team member. He was the reason we were doing this in the first place and we soon found out just how much he did in the background to make HPE successful. We had to pull even closer together as a team to do all the “dirty work” that goes with a seminar like this. But more than that, we lost a dear friend. You couldn’t know Craig and not like him. His humble, gentle spirit and his dogged determination was infectious, and he left a hole in all our lives.
After Craig’s funeral, we all knew we wanted to do something special, and the Final Point seemed like the perfect way to honor his contributions to us, and to all the Texas surveyors that had been influenced by his work in some fashion. We found a spot on the LIT Ranch, a place that Craig loved, and with the generosity of Bill O’Brien and his family, we were given permission to put Craig’s marker on top of a hill overlooking the Canadian River valley.
At this year’s HPE, we had a ceremony at Craig’s Final Point marker where everyone who wanted to speak was given the opportunity to share their memories and thoughts. It was a bittersweet moment, but it gave us some closure and I think Craig would’ve approved. It was a small, humble offering to a man who had a positive impact and touched so many, in a quiet and beautiful place. A marker that we can return to each year and hopefully, pass along some of the kindness that Craig always had to offer.
We’ll keep going as long as we can. We’ve all come to love the High Plains Experience and as long as folks keep showing up, we’ll be there. We have to work a little harder now, but we try to do it without complaining. Craig never did. We’re all just feathers in the wind, but we are grateful for our time with people like Craig Alderman who inspire us to be better.

For more on the NSPS Final Point program, visit: https://nsps.site-ym.com/general/custom.asp?page=FinalPoint
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Posted By Scott Finley, Texas811,
Wednesday, June 6, 2018
Updated: Monday, June 4, 2018
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We’ve all heard the phrase “When in Rome, do as the Romans do.” Well, the Romans did surveying, as did the ancient Egyptians nearly 2700 years earlier. The Romans recognized surveying as a profession – surveyors were known as gromatici. The forebears of today’s surveyors no doubt groused about some of the same things we grumble about - standing in the sun for hours on end or why an assistant failed to write down measurements. (Probably thinking of his wager in tomorrow’s chariot races!)
One thing they didn’t have to deal with, though, was today’s heavy underground infrastructure.
Ramming a steel survey rod into the ground is like playing roulette. You win if you miss something, you lose if you hit something; how much you lose depends on what you hit.
To prevent that, Texas811 offers a survey/design ticket to identify what’s below before you begin your field work.

A pair of ticket survey samples. Reminder - contractors will need to call back in and process a normal ticket once ready to begin working.
According to Scott Sasajima, Director of Operations at Texas811, “Protecting underground facilities always starts with 811. If you’re in the planning stage, request a Survey/Design ticket if no excavation is taking place. If and when that should change, convert your request to a routine ticket so the facility operators are aware of the pending excavation and refresh or place their markings accordingly.”
Again, the design survey ticket does not cover any excavation, and does not relieve the eventual excavator from calling 811 before actual excavation gets underway. TSPS Association President-Elect John Barnard defines a design survey as “typically consisting of boundary (including easements and set backs), improvements, trees and topography... basically a picture of the legal and physical constraints that would affect architectural or engineering design.”
That said, the laws set forth in Utilities Code Title 5, Chapter 251 and the Texas Administrative Code (TAC) Title 16, Part 1, Chapter 18 require excavators (and driving a rod into the ground at that depth turns a surveyor into an excavator by definition) to call 811 if excavation activities exceed a depth of 16”. Therefore, some cases that involve setting property corners, setting control points, and certain other survey activities are considered to be excavation.
Work considered to be for “design purposes” typically does not meet the definition of excavation and therefore operators have no legal requirement to locate their facilities for the requestor. Some do so voluntarily while others may prohibit their locators from responding so a requestor can’t assume that every operator will locate.
For such design jobs, we recommend that you call 811 which will generate a ticket identifying all operators which may have facilities in your proposed project. While you might not receive a Positive Response from all operators at least you will be able to see who is in the area so that you can contact their engineering departments directly and review any potential conflicts.
The operators who are notified have 48 hours to provide a “Positive Response” by either placing marks on the ground identifying the approximate location of the underground facility or by clearing it by fax or e-mail.
If you do not receive a Positive Response within 48 hours, contact 811 again and declare a “No Response” identifying the operator that did not respond and the contact center will reissue the locate request. Repeat the process as often as necessary if you don’t receive a Positive Response.
More information is always available from your local Damage Prevention Council of Texas (DPC). These 23 non-profit councils hold free monthly meetings with contractors, utility operators, and stakeholders interested in damage prevention. The round table discussions and lunches facilitated by a Damage Prevention Manager are a great way to propose solutions and get answers.
For access to individual DPC websites and meeting schedules or to arrange for a Damage Prevention Manager to speak at one your meetings, visit the DPCs of Texas website.
Always remember that the call to 811 is free as is the subsequent locating.
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