Current through Register Vol. 18, September 20, 2024
(1) A distinction must be made between making
and documenting original measurements in the creation of survey products,
versus the copying, interpretation, or representation of those measurements.
Further, a distinction must be made according to the intent, use, or purpose of
measurement products to determine an authoritative location, versus the use of
those products as a locational reference for planning, infrastructure
management, and general information. The following items are not to be included
as activities within the definition of land surveying:
(a) Items and activities exempted in
60-2-209,
MCA and
76-3-209,
MCA.
(b) The creation of any map
not used for the authoritative location of property boundaries, the definition
of the shape or contour of the earth, or the location of fixed works of
engineering. Examples include but are not limited to maps:
(i) prepared by private firms or government
agencies for use as guides to motorists, boaters, aviators, or
pedestrians;
(ii) prepared for
publication in a gazetteer or atlas as an educational tool or reference
publication;
(iii) prepared for or
by educational institutions for use in the curriculum of any course of
study;
(iv) produced by any
electronic or print media firm as an illustrative guide to the geographic
location of any event; and
(v)
prepared by laypersons for conversational or illustrative purposes, including
advertising material and users guides.
(c) The transcription of previously
georeferenced data into a Geographic Information System (GIS) or Land
Information System (LIS) by manual or electronic means, and the maintenance
thereof, provided the data are clearly not intended to indicate:
(i) the authoritative location of property or
administrative boundaries, easements, rights of way, or other legal interest in
real property;
(ii) the definition
of the shape or contour of the earth; and
(iii) the location of fixed works of
engineering.
(d) The
transcription of public record data into a GIS- or LIS-based cadastre (tax maps
and associated records) by manual or electronic means, and the maintenance of
that cadastre, provided the data are clearly not intended to authoritatively
represent property or administrative boundaries or easements, rights of way, or
other legal interests in real property. Examples include:
(i) tax maps;
(ii) zoning maps; and
(iii) school district maps.
(e) The preparation of any
document by any federal government agency that does not define real property
boundaries. Examples include:
(i) civilian
and military versions of quadrangle topographic maps;
(ii) military maps;
(iii) satellite imagery;
(iv) aerial photography; and
(v) orthoimagery.
(f) The incorporation or use of documents or
databases prepared by any federal agency into a GIS/LIS. Examples include:
(i) census and demographic data;
(ii) quadrangle topographic maps;
and
(iii) military maps.
(g) Inventory maps and databases
created by any individual or organization, in either hardcopy or electronic
form of physical features, facilities, or infrastructure that are wholly
contained within properties to which they have rights or for which they have
management or regulatory responsibility. The distribution of these maps and/or
databases outside the organization must contain appropriate metadata clearly
indicating that the data is not for design.
(h) Maps and databases depicting the
distribution of natural resources or phenomena. Examples include, but are not
limited to, maps prepared by:
(i)
foresters;
(ii)
geologists;
(iii) soil
scientists;
(iv)
geophysicists;
(v)
biologists;
(vi) archeologists;
and
(vii) historians.
(i) Maps and georeferenced
databases depicting physical features and events prepared by any government
agency where the access to that data is restricted by law. This includes
georeferenced data generated by law enforcement agencies involving crime
statistics and criminal activities.
(j) Engineering surveys performed by a
professional engineer as specifically allowed under
37-67-101(4),
MCA.
(k) Work ordinarily performed
by persons who operate or maintain machinery or equipment, communication lines,
signal circuits, electric power lines, or pipelines.
(l) The preparation of documents that create,
assign, reference, or transfer interests in real property by reference to a
legal description prepared by a professional land surveyor. Examples include,
but are not limited to:
(i)
contracts;
(ii) deeds;
(iii) easements;
(iv) certificates of location for mining
claims;
(v) rights of way;
and
(vi) similar documents, which
may incorporate or make reference to:
(A)
plats;
(B) certificates of
survey;
(C) narrative legal
descriptions; or
(D) exhibits
prepared by a professional land surveyor.
(m) Operating and publishing data from a
continuously operating reference station (CORS).
(n) Original data acquisition by contract or
second parties for nonauthoritative purposes when the metadata is clearly
labeled "Not for Design."
(o) The
acquisition, preparation, processing, manipulation, or certification of final
products or original data developed or collected by remote sensing or
photogrammetric methods. Control may be derived from existing sources for
remote sensing or photogrammetric products, where spatial accuracy is not
critical and specific map accuracy standards are not required.
37-1-131,
37-67-202,
MCA; IMP,
37-1-131,
37-67-101,
37-67-103,
37-67-301,
MCA;