I guess a good corollary would be the US currency. When we have a new
Secretary of the Treasury, we do not recall all of the old bills. 

Whenever a shipment of product needs to be made (after the departure of the
old signatory), a DOC with the new signature is produced.

Scott Barrows
KTL - Dallas

> -----Original Message-----
> From: John Allen [SMTP:john.al...@rdel.co.uk]
> Sent: Thursday, November 11, 1999 10:55 AM
> To:   emc-p...@ieee.org
> Subject:      RE: D of C - Who Signs?
> 
> 
> Hi Folks
> 
> I disagree strongly with Scott's assessment that the DoC has to be
> resigned 
> for several very important and pragmatic reasons:
> 
> a) To-date I have yet to see any official EU or other substantive document
> 
> to support his viewpoint.
> 
> b) People are always "coming and going" - it is a fact of business life, 
> and new personnel inherit the legal responsibilities of the old.
> (That said, the "old" personnel could still be prosecuted for knowingly 
> breaking the law if they had falsely signed a DoC).
> 
> c) If Scott's viewpoint were widely held we would all be continuously 
> updating and reissuing our DoC's. In fact we would have little time for 
> anything else - like developing new products!
> 
> d) The date of the signature then becomes critical - and could force a 
> complete review of the product against the latest versions of the 
> appropriate referenced standard(s).
> 
> The problem comes if those standards have themselves been updated since
> the 
> date of the first signature - in which case a product might have to be 
> modified merely because the person signing the original DoC had left the 
> company!
> 
> The latter proposition is plainly ludicrous and not envisaged in the 
> Directives or in the harmonised standards, which allow you to continue 
> manufacturing an unaltered compliant product for some considerable number 
> of years after the last date you are allowed to certify to a particular 
> issue level of a standard.
> 
> e) The only realistic and supportable reasons for updating the DoC are
> thus 
> that :
> (i) The product itself changes;
> (ii) The standard(s) change, and you are going to continue manufacturing 
> beyond last date at which it is permissable to to manufacture and certify 
> to the particular issue level of the standard(s);
> (iii) The company and/or model names/number change.
> 
> The above opinion is my own, but I can see no reason why we - or any other
> 
> company - should take any different view.
> 
> Regards
> 
> John Allen
> Product & System Safety Manager
> Racal Defence Electronics Ltd
> Bracknell
> UK
> 
> 
> ----------
> From:         Scott Douglas[SMTP:s_doug...@ecrm.com]
> Sent:         11 November 1999 13:39
> To:   reyno...@pb.com; emc-p...@ieee.org
> Subject:      RE: D of C - Who Signs?
> 
> 
> The DoC must be re-signed.
> 
> Scott
> s_doug...@ecrm.com
> ECRM Incorporated
> Tewksbury, MA  USA
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: reyno...@pb.com [mailto:reyno...@pb.com]
> Sent: Thursday, November 11, 1999 10:16 AM
> To: emc-p...@ieee.org
> Subject: D of C - Who Signs?
> Importance: Low
> 
> 
> 
>      Hello!
> 
>      Forgive me for asking a possibly dumb question but here goes:
> 
>      If the EU Declaration of Conformity is signed by a
>      responsible/technically competent person who has been nominated on
>      behalf of the company's Directors and then that person leaves the
>      company,  does his/her replacement who assumes the same level of
>      responsibility need to go back and re-issue all of the old D of C's
>      with their signature on the document.
> 
>      In other words is it acceptable to issue D of C's to
>      suppliers/customers which have been signed by someone who has left
> the
>      company.
> 
>      Thankyou in advance.
> 
>      Tony Reynolds
>      Pitney Bowes (UK) Ltd
>      Tel +44 (0) 1279 449479
>      Fax +44 (0) 1279 449118
>      e-mail: reyno...@pb.com
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ---------
> This message is coming from the emc-pstc discussion list.
> To cancel your subscription, send mail to majord...@ieee.org
> with the single line: "unsubscribe emc-pstc" (without the
> quotes).  For help, send mail to ed.pr...@cubic.com,
> jim_bac...@monarch.com, ri...@sdd.hp.com, or
> roger.volgst...@compaq.com (the list administrators).
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ---------
> This message is coming from the emc-pstc discussion list.
> To cancel your subscription, send mail to majord...@ieee.org
> with the single line: "unsubscribe emc-pstc" (without the
> quotes).  For help, send mail to ed.pr...@cubic.com,
> jim_bac...@monarch.com, ri...@sdd.hp.com, or
> roger.volgst...@compaq.com (the list administrators).
> 
> 
> 
> ---------
> This message is coming from the emc-pstc discussion list.
> To cancel your subscription, send mail to majord...@ieee.org
> with the single line: "unsubscribe emc-pstc" (without the
> quotes).  For help, send mail to ed.pr...@cubic.com,
> jim_bac...@monarch.com, ri...@sdd.hp.com, or
> roger.volgst...@compaq.com (the list administrators).
> 

---------
This message is coming from the emc-pstc discussion list.
To cancel your subscription, send mail to majord...@ieee.org
with the single line: "unsubscribe emc-pstc" (without the
quotes).  For help, send mail to ed.pr...@cubic.com,
jim_bac...@monarch.com, ri...@sdd.hp.com, or
roger.volgst...@compaq.com (the list administrators).

Reply via email to