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I-Introduction
Voluntary consensus
standards for products, processes and services are at the foundation of the
U.S. economy and society. The United States has a proud tradition of
developing and using voluntary standards to support the needs of our
citizens and the competitiveness of U.S. industry. The American
National Standards Institute (ANSI), the coordinator of the U.S. standards
system, has brought together public and private sector [1] interests to make this
happen.
But the system is facing new challenges. Increasing global concern
for health, safety and the protection of the environment combined with
dramatic increases in world trade and competition from other countries have
altered the standards landscape. At the national level, Congress has
directed federal agencies to rely on voluntary consensus standards where
compatible with their mission, raising the importance of national
standardization processes for both the market and society.
II-Imperatives for Action
The standardization
world has changed.
We can't assume that
U.S. technology and practices will automatically be adopted everywhere, nor
can we assume that within the U.S. everyone will be satisfied with
business as usual.
Internationally
- The European Union is
aggressively and successfully promoting its technology and practices
to other nations around the world through its own standards processes
and through its national representation in the international standards
activities of the International Organization for Standardization
(ISO), the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) and the
International Telecommunication Union (ITU).
- Emerging economies with the
potential for explosive growth are looking to ISO and IEC for
standards. In some sectors these standards do not reflect U.S.
needs or practices.
The exclusion of
technology supporting U.S. needs from international standards can be a
significant detriment to U.S. competitiveness. The U.S. will lose market
share as competitors work hard to shape standards to support their own
technologies and methods. Equally important, standards are the basis
for protection of health, safety and the environment. When our
standards in these areas are not accepted elsewhere, we all lose.
At home
- U.S. public and private
sector interests have reduced their investment in the development of
globally accepted standards because of downsizing and deregulation.
- Customers of
standardization want more for their money a reduction in the
duplication and overlap that sometimes results from a decentralized
system, and better options for the delivery and utilization of
standards.
- Government[2] agencies demand evidence
that voluntary consensus standards meet high principles so that they
can rely on them for both regulation and procurement.
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III-Principles
U.S. interests strongly
agree on the principles necessary for the development of national or international
standards to meet societal and market needs.
In successful
standards processes
- Decisions are reached
through consensus among those affected.
- Participation is open
to all affected interests.
- Balance is maintained among
competing interests.
- The process is transparent
information on the process and progress is directly available.
- Due process assures that all views
will be considered and that appeals are possible.
- The process is flexible,
allowing the use of different methodologies to meet the needs of
different technology and product sectors.
- The process is timely;
purely administrative matters do not slow down the work.
- Standards activities are coherent,
avoiding overlap or conflict.
Successful
standards processes yield the right results
- Standards are relevant,
meeting agreed criteria and satisfying real needs by providing added
value.
- Standards are responsive
to the real world; they use available, current technology and do not
unnecessarily invalidate existing products or processes.
- Standards are performance-based,
specifying essential characteristics rather than detailed designs.
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IV-Our Strategic
Vision
U.S. leadership in
implementing these principles nationally and internationally will turn
visions into reality.
Internationally
- There is at most one
globally applied standard and one globally accepted test, with
conformity assessment processes appropriate to the needs of the
parties, for each characteristic of a product, process or service.
- Governments use voluntary
consensus standards in regulation and procurement.
- The system provides fair
treatment for U.S. products and services, accommodating flexible
standardization solutions.
- For some technology
sectors, ISO and IEC are the preferred organizations within which to
achieve one global standard. Other sectors utilize other
organizations to achieve that goal. The U.S. confirms its commitment
to contribute consistently and effectively in all international
standardization activities.
- The standards development
and delivery processes have been re-engineered to include full
implementation of electronic tools, providing the potential for
accelerating the work while reducing costs and making the resulting
standards available in more convenient and responsive ways.
At home
- A cooperative process
involving industry, government and consumers in the U.S. produces
coherent and unified messages and well-coordinated U.S. positions
internationally.
- All stakeholders
participate in development of U.S. consensus positions.
- The coordination function
of ANSI is strengthened to minimize duplication and overlap of
national standards development and to develop coherence with
international standards where beneficial. All materially
affected interests recognize the importance of this function and
support ANSI's role.
- Public and private sector
management recognize the value of both national and international
standardization and fund them appropriately.
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V-Moving Forward
The strength of standardization
in the United States is a sectoral focus supported by a dynamic
infrastructure.
The sectoral focus
comes from the participants companies, government agencies, public
interest organizations, talented individuals who understand what is needed
in their sector, and the standards developers through which they work to
meet those customer needs. The sectoral approach allows interested
parties to address their own issues and develop working methods that fit
the problems at hand, since no single standardization system can satisfy
all needs. This allows efficient standards development and fosters
innovation and competition. When cross-sectoral issues arise, sector
definitions change, or in venues where a single national voice is required,
the infrastructure provided by the American National Standards Institute
(ANSI) provides facilitation and mediation.
A sectoral approach
recognizes that there is no simple recipe that can be handed down to fit
all needs. Sectors must develop their own plans; the purpose of a national
strategy is to provide guidance, coherence and inspiration to those inside
and outside the system without constraining creativity or effectiveness.
The U.S. National Standards Strategy therefore consists of a set of
strategic initiatives having broad applicability which will be applied
according to their relevance and importance to particular sectors.
Stakeholders are encouraged to develop their own tactical initiatives where
needed and the national strategy suggests some which have widespread
applicability.
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1 Build on the trend in government
to use voluntary consensus standards through existing public/private
partnerships
Recent years have seen
a dramatic increase in governmental reliance on voluntary consensus
standards. Domestically, our vision is coming true because of
cooperative public and private leadership. Public Law 104-113, the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (NTTAA), is the cornerstone
for this at the federal level, promoting increased use of voluntary
consensus standards for both regulation and procurement. We are also
making progress internationally; examples include re-engineering at the
International Telecommunications Union (ITU) and NATO's use of voluntary
consensus standards.
Further progress can be
made as standards developers in all sectors work with the appropriate
governmental agencies to increase use of the voluntary consensus process.
In addition, new initiatives can increase the use of voluntary consensus
standards at the state and local level to reduce the cost to the public,
government and business (including conformity assessment) without
compromising public interests.
Tactical initiatives include:
- ANSI should provide state and
local government with ways to easily identify where their interests
are being addressed, and mechanisms for participating in overall
policy development;
- Standards developers should work with
governmental organizations to support increased use of voluntary
consensus standards in their areas of expertise;
- U.S. Government, in addition to its
ongoing efforts in support of the NTTAA, should provide
leadership in intergovernmental activities at the regional and global
levels for closer cooperation with voluntary consensus standards processes;
- U.S. Government should use existing
relationships with state and local government and their
responsibilities under NTTAA to support greater use of voluntary
standards.
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2 Address the ongoing need for
standards in support of health, safety and the environment
While U.S. standards
have contributed significantly to improving safeguards for health, safety
and the environment, the U.S. standards system must continue to incorporate
technical excellence based on sound science.
Tactical initiatives include:
- Standards developers should establish specific
guidance to encourage participants to include health, safety and the
environment as integral aspects of their work;
- Government should participate in
standards development efforts to define technical specifications that
meet public objectives, and encourage the same approach
internationally;
- Industry should support
participation in standardization nationally and internationally, and
make sure that the resulting standards add value;
- ANSI should provide active
coordination in the areas of health, safety and the environment for
U.S. standards developers to ensure that the principles of openness,
balance, due process and consensus are met;
- ANSI and the standards
developers should also be proactive in international groups such as
ISO, IEC and ITU that rely on national body representation.
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3 Improve the responsiveness of the
standards system to the views and needs of consumer interests
The representation of
consumer interests in standardization is important because standards are
increasingly used to define parameters of products and services critical to
consumers. Consumers have always been part of the U.S. standards
development process, and principles such as openness and balance ensure
that their voices can be heard. The U.S. standards system needs to continue
to pay attention to consumers and make sure that their voices not only can
be heard, but are heard.
Tactical initiatives include:
- Standards developers should review consumer
participation in their committees, determine if there is appropriate
representation, and develop plans to address the results;
- ANSI, standards developers
and government should establish initiatives to
- educate consumer
organizations on investing in both technical and policy participation,
and the methods available to do so;
- ANSI should explore with the
standards communities of Canada and Mexico the possibility of
establishing a regional body for consumer interests;
- Industry should use consumer
research as the basis for standardization initiatives and decisions;
- Government should review its
consumer-related programs and initiate standards information and
participation programs where appropriate;
- Consumer organizations should establish programs
to review information such as ANSI's Standards Action to identify
areas where they need to be active.
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4 Broaden the U.S. standards
'umbrella' to include all those organizations that are contributing to the
standards system
Standards in the U.S.
are developed by a variety of organizations ranging from those accredited
by ANSI to special purpose industry consortia. This diversity is
welcomed the U.S. sees no need to force everyone into a single mold, and
applauds the benefits that result. The U.S. process will be further
strengthened when the talents of all these organizations are directed
toward common objectives. As newer organizations develop their
specifications, their work becomes the basis for action by the formal
process when that adds value. Further linkages between these different
types of organizations can therefore result in better standards.
Tactical initiatives include:
- Standards developers should review their own
operations to see if alternative processes such as those provided by
leading U.S. standards developers to support non-traditional standards
groups would further strengthen standardization in their sectors;
- ANSI should review its
accreditation process to ensure that it adds value, and investigate
its applicability to broader constituencies;
- U.S. Government should encourage more use
of the principles embodied in accreditation by recognizing the ANSI
process as providing sufficient evidence that American National Standards
(ANS) meet federal criteria for voluntary consensus standards;
- Non-traditional standards
organizations should review their objectives to determine where closer
interaction with the formal system will help add value to their
efforts;
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Industry
should review its activities in all standards developers to improve the
overall effectiveness of standardization.
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5 Work to improve processes
internationally to more closely reflect our principles and vision
The U.S. recognizes that
not all standards development reflects the ideals embodied in our
principles and visions. Our objective, therefore, is for each part of
the U.S. system to strive toward better implementation of those principles
and visions and to work toward similar improvements where we participate
outside the U.S.
Tactical initiatives include:
- Standards developers in the U.S. who provide
for international participation should make sure that all viewpoints,
including those from developing nations, receive proper consideration;
- ANSI should take the leadership
in ensuring that our principles and visions including the advantages
of a sectoral approach and the desirability of globally accepted
standards are addressed in regional organizations such as the Pacific
Area Standards Congress (PASC) and the Comision Panamericana de Normas
Tocnicas (COPANT);
- U.S. Government should, in its
interactions with other governments, support process improvements and
encourage them to provide similar support for their voluntary
consensus standards developers.
The
majority of U.S. participation outside the U.S. takes place in ISO and IEC
and therefore deserves special attention. Reviewing the work now
underway to re-engineer the ITU, for example, can help introduce new 'best in class' processes. Tactical initiatives that should be
undertaken by all organizations working in ISO and IEC ANSI, standards
developers, industry, and government to further achieve the best
standards to support trade and commerce while protecting health, safety and
the environment include:
- Provide leadership in
moving further toward a flexible sector-based structure and
management;
- Provide leadership in
further streamlining their processes and operations, including further
alignment and consolidation of functions where possible;
- Provide leadership in
advancing U.S. principles, and initiate change where needed;
- Work to develop alliances
with industry, national standards bodies, and governments in other
nations to ensure that best processes are adopted;
- Consider separating
technical development of standards (by directly participating
technical experts) from final approval (by national bodies), and
review what organizational changes would be desirable;
- Review the Vienna and
Dresden Agreements [3] and determine whether they still address the
best interests of all parties;
- Consider whether the
current - one nation, one vote - which ignores both decentralized and
regional approaches to standardization is still the most effective
methodology for all sectors.
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6 Work to harmonize the use of
standards worldwide as a tool for meeting regulatory requirements
For products, processes
and services having an impact beyond the U.S., we seek at most one globally
applied standard and one globally accepted test with conformity assessment
processes appropriate to the needs of the parties.
Tactical initiatives include:
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Industry
and government should identify needed new standards and pursue global
solutions;
- Standards developers should
work with other standards bodies to identify existing standards in
need of harmonization and pursue those changes;
- U.S. Government should work
with governments in other countries, and through intergovernmental
organizations, to minimize the use of different standards for the same
purpose, different or duplicative tests for the same standards, and
the use of standards as non-tariff trade barriers;
- ANSI and government should
improve understanding of the use of voluntary consensus standards in
regulation.
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7 Provide an outreach program to
show those outside the U.S. the value of U.S. technology, standards and
processes
The decentralized
system in the United States is not well understood. Not only can this
disadvantage U.S. interests, but the benefits of our system flexibility
and relevance to users are not always recognized by global interests even
when they represent a better solution. It is in our interests to make sure
that everyone understands the strengths offered by the U.S. approach.
Tactical initiatives include:
- Standards
developers should
initiate education processes worldwide for their sectors to ensure
that opportunities for direct participation in U.S.-based activities
are available to all;
- Standards developers should
partner inside and outside the U.S. in areas of mutual interest such
as health, safety and the environment;
- U.S. Government should
increase the level of standards-related resources available to other
countries, particularly those countries where U.S. industry is
competing for key business or where the possibility for strategic
alliances exists;
- ANSI should provide
leadership in informing those in other countries of the benefits and
results of U.S. standardization efforts, reinforcing complementary
efforts by U.S. standards developers and U.S. Government agencies;
- ANSI and standards
developers should provide leadership in coordination of sectoral
initiatives with other nations.
- Industry should support the
incorporation of U.S. needs in standards by working with industry
outside the U.S.;
- All participants should
work to make sure that those requiring standards in other nations
understand the benefits of using the U.S.-based sectoral approach to
meet their needs.
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8 Improve the standards process
within the U.S. to address customer needs for efficiency
No system is perfect.
While the sectoral approach does provide maximum flexibility, it can
develop inefficiencies. All parties in the U.S. standards process should
continue to improve.
Tactical initiatives include:
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Standards
developers should increase their use of information technology to improve
the working processes for standards development and make those processes
increasingly available to those participants whose resource limitations
prevent the use of the ômeeting and paperö model;
- Standards developers should
work toward the use of compatible tools, so that participants working
in more than one standards developer will have the benefit of common
tools and systems;
- Standards developers should
use standards distribution systems that meet the needs of today's
customers, establishing, for example, cost-effective mechanisms such
as alerting systems and flexible licensing agreements so that both
small and large organizations can take better advantage of electronic
availability;
- ANSI should provide a forum
for standards developers to work together so that everyone can take
advantage of 'best in class' technologies and processes;
- Industry and government
should encourage standards developers to emphasize these activities.
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9 Improve the standards process
within the U.S. to address customer needs for coherence
A sectorally based,
decentralized system can sometimes lead to overlap in work programs and
occasionally to overlapping or conflicting standards. In many cases, this
merely reflects a different set of customer needs for different
sectors. However, we need to guard against duplication of efforts and
results where it does not add value.
Tactical initiatives include:
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ANSI
should provide an 'early warning' system to make sure that potential
duplication can be identified as soon as possible and appropriately
addressed, and provide facilitation and mediation services to effect a
proper resolution;
- ANSI should review its
procedures to make sure that standards receiving the ANS designation
are relevant and do not conflict with other standards;
- Standards developers should
work together to eliminate areas of redundancy, making the process
more efficient as well as more coherent;
- Industry should be
proactive at eliminating duplication by focusing their participation
through fewer different organizations;
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Government
should also be proactive through its participation and through development
of early warning systems for proposed regulatory actions.
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10 Improve communications between
various public and private elements of the U.S. standards system
A system with many
partners can sometimes suffer from communications lapses. All participants
in the U.S. should strive to improve both internal and external
communications using advanced technologies.
Tactical initiatives include:
- Standards developersshould
establish information dissemination mechanisms for interested parties
outside their direct membership;
- Government should establish
processes to ensure timely communication of standards related needs
and activities ù both internal ones and those in intergovernmental
activities so that voluntary consensus processes can provide the best
standards development support;
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ANSI
should provide linkages between standards developers, government agencies,
and others to ensure timely distribution of information to the widest
possible audience.
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11 Make the value of standards
development both apparent and real by educating public and private sector
decision-makers about the value of standards and how to take advantage of
the process
It is clear that
management in both the public and private sectors are not sufficiently
aware of the benefits of external standardization, or their current
reliance on voluntary consensus standards, even when they are vigorously
implementing standardization programs in their internal operations. An
organized education process will provide broader participation, more
effective participants, and higher quality standards. Tactical
initiatives include: ANSI
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Standards
developers should develop education programs for their sectors to address
management and technical personnel in industry and government on the
benefits of standardization;
- ANSI should develop a
program to introduce standards and their effect on technology and
trade into university curricula in business, engineering, and public
administration;
- Government should develop
and implement appropriate training programs for government personnel
at all levels;
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All
participants should develop case study evidence that demonstrates the value
of relying on voluntary consensus standards in both regulation and
procurement.
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12 Establish a stable funding
mechanism for the standardization infrastructure
Standards development
systems around the world have in recent years come under increased
financial pressure. The U.S. realizes that standards development must be a
value-added process if it meets public and private needs, then those who
want the results will ensure that the necessary funding is
provided.Tactical initiatives include:
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Standards
developers, as part of their education initiatives, should provide economic
examples of how the process works;
- Government should pay its
fair share of the process costs, not just as a major participant, but
as the representative of the broader public interest;
- ANSI should sponsor a
summit on funding, giving all parties an opportunity to address
alternative methodologies and best practices in light of the needs of
all parties;
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Industry
should take steps to ensure that standards development in their respective
sectors is appropriately funded.
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VI-In The Longer
Run
The proof of a strategy
is in its execution. This document represents an architecture for achieving
goals. The next step is for all concerned to address the tactical issues
involved in making the strategy a reality. Doing so will require
communication, cooperation and planning among all the concerned parties.
The American National Standards Institute will continue to serve as a
mechanism for coordinating, integrating, and reporting progress. ANSI
should provide an annual report on actions taken in support of the strategy
and, after a suitable time perhaps three years all of the parties to
this strategy should reconvene to determine the progress that has been
made, the actions needed to make further progress, and whether new
situations dictate strategic revisions and offer new opportunities.
[1] The word sector is used in two different meanings in
this document. The first use divides the world into the public sector and the private sector, distinguishing between the roles of government and
non-government. The second use refers to a technology area where
customer needs dictate a coherent and consistent approach to
standardization. This use is sometimes called industry sector or market sector but we have chosen to use the simpler term sector to
include all interested parties and not just commercial interests.
Most standards are related to specific sectors (e.g., information
technology, automotive) and are not applicable to the needs of other
sectors.
[2] The word government in this paper means government in
all places and at all levels. Where more specificity is intended,
qualification is provided thus U.S. government means the part or parts
of the U.S. Government relevant to the discussion. The paper does not
attempt to identify specific agencies and functions within any government
designation beyond this.
[3] The Vienna Agreement is a cooperative agreement between
ISO and the European standards organization CEN that provides for
development in one and approval, with parallel voting, in both. It
also provides for ISO observers in CEN technical committees when work is
being done there. The Dresden Agreement provides a similar framework
for cooperation between IEC and CENELEC.
The National Standards
Strategy for the United States
was approved by the
ANSI Board of Directors on August 31, 2000.
Copyright ANSI 1997-2000
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