L
Now that's a different problem altogether. We're again in the same situation as the first poster had: what an auditor thinks vs what the customer thinks (potentially vs what's in the standard and vs what's common practice/feasible to do).
For the sake of the audit, I'd recommend sticking to the customer's requirements. They're the ones keeping you in business. If an auditor has a problem with it, show them a statement from the customer or their declaration of the requirement. hopefully, that should settle this discussion and make it easier for you.
Lil
For the sake of the audit, I'd recommend sticking to the customer's requirements. They're the ones keeping you in business. If an auditor has a problem with it, show them a statement from the customer or their declaration of the requirement. hopefully, that should settle this discussion and make it easier for you.
Lil