Generated by GPT-5-mini| Ordre des arpenteurs-géomètres du Québec | |
|---|---|
| Name | Ordre des arpenteurs-géomètres du Québec |
| Formation | 19th century |
| Type | Professional order |
| Purpose | Regulation of land surveying |
| Headquarters | Quebec City |
| Region served | Quebec |
| Language | French |
| Leader title | President |
| Main organ | Council |
Ordre des arpenteurs-géomètres du Québec is the professional order responsible for licensing and regulating land surveyors in the province of Quebec, Canada. It oversees practice standards, certification, and public protection for cadastral, topographic, and geomatics work across municipalities such as Montréal, Québec City, and Laval. The organization interfaces with institutions including Université Laval, McGill University, and provincial bodies like the Assemblée nationale du Québec to maintain professional competence and legal conformity.
The origins trace to 19th-century initiatives influenced by figures like John A. Macdonald-era policies and cadastral reforms paralleling developments in France and United Kingdom surveying traditions. Legislative milestones include acts passed by the Parliament of Quebec that formalized licensure, echoing regulatory frameworks from Professional Engineers Ontario and historical models such as the Ordnance Survey. The Ordre evolved alongside infrastructure projects like the construction of the Lachine Canal, the expansion of the Canadian Pacific Railway, and urban planning in Sherbrooke and Trois-Rivières, responding to demands from municipal administrations and provincial ministries such as the Ministère des Transports du Québec.
Governance is carried out by an elected council modeled after collegiate orders like the Ordre des ingénieurs du Québec and similar to governance found in Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors. Leadership posts, including president and treasurer, liaise with courts such as the Cour supérieure du Québec when professional discipline intersects with legal disputes. The Ordre collaborates with federal entities like Natural Resources Canada and provincial regulators including the Bureau de la concurrence in matters of practice and ethics.
Membership requires academic credentials from institutions such as Université de Sherbrooke or international equivalents recognized by bodies like the Association of Commonwealth Universities, combined with practical traineeship akin to internships under licensed surveyors in regions like Outaouais and Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine. Candidates navigate certification pathways comparable to those administered by the Association of Canada Lands Surveyors and must comply with statutes influenced by the Code civil du Québec. Applicants often reference standards from organizations such as the International Federation of Surveyors.
Licensed members undertake cadastral surveys for land titles recorded within the Société québécoise d'information géographique, survey plans used in real estate transactions in Longueuil and land division matters governed by municipal councils like Ville de Québec, and contribute to projects directed by agencies such as Hydro-Québec and Port of Montréal. Surveyors advise courts, prepare technical evidence for tribunals including the Tribunal administratif du Québec, and support heritage conservation efforts linked to sites like Old Quebec and infrastructure projects such as the Champlain Bridge replacement.
The Ordre enforces codes of ethics parallel to those of the Barreau du Québec and practice standards referencing international norms from the International Organization for Standardization, while coordinating with standards bodies like Standards Council of Canada. Disciplinary processes resemble proceedings before the Conseil de la magistrature du Québec and may result in sanctions administered under provincial professional statutes enacted by the Ministère de la Justice du Québec.
Academic pathways include bachelor's and graduate programs in geomatics at École de technologie supérieure, continuing education offerings in collaboration with Collège de Maisonneuve, and accreditation processes aligned with curricular models from Université de Montréal and international benchmarks such as those of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors. Partnerships with research centers like the Institut national de la recherche scientifique support applied research in remote sensing, GNSS, and geographic information systems used by municipal planners in Brossard and provincial agencies like Ministère de l'Énergie et des Ressources naturelles.
The Ordre's members have contributed to large-scale undertakings including cadastral mapping for urban redevelopment in Vieux-Montréal, floodplain studies affecting the Rivière Saint-Charles, and land-use planning supporting the Québec City–Windsor Corridor. They have participated in collaborative projects with Parks Canada on heritage sites and with transportation initiatives like the Réseau express métropolitain and port modernization at Port of Québec. Through public outreach and partnerships with organizations such as the Fédération canadienne des arpenteurs-géomètres, the Ordre promotes best practices in property delineation and geomatics services across Quebec.
Category:Professional associations based in Quebec Category:Surveying organizations