Frequently Asked Questions
Get answers to common questions about
ASTM standards, membership and
participation, balloting and voting, and more.
Standards and General ASTM
When compliance with a standard is not mandated by law, market participants observe standards simply because it is in their interest to do so.
The content of voluntary standards may be incorporated by reference directly into government statutes and regulations and then must be followed as a matter of law.- Click the Products & Services dropdown and select Standards & Publications
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ASTM Membership and Participating on Technical Committees
Anyone who has interest in the field covered by a committee’s scope is eligible to become a committee member.
Joining ASTM International and one or more technical committees can be done online on the ASTM website. Your annual membership fee of $75 comes with one complimentary volume of the Annual Book of Standards in print or online.
Any interested person can participate on a technical committee through ASTM membership.
The individual membership fee is $75 and the organizational membership fee is $400. The taxability of membership fees is subject to the applicable sales tax rules and regulations of your jurisdiction.
Open participation and the consensus process are core values and the principal strengths of standards development in ASTM International. To be successful, the consensus process depends on the ability of members to work together with an attitude of collaboration and collegiality. Each member is expected to participate and contribute in good faith to the standardization activities undertaken by the committee(s) to which they belong.
The process of building new activities within ASTM usually starts small; as it progresses, it gains momentum as well as size and relevance.
Stage one in the organizational process is the exploratory level. First, ASTM is contacted about possible development of an activity. Then a period of due diligence is done to gather information about the industry and the need for standards. Next, a few diverse stakeholders are contacted (often from opposite sides of the issue), to see if there is enough support to proceed.
The Regulations Governing ASTM Technical Committees require voting balance in a committee and a subcommittee. That balance comes through official and non-official votes. The ASTM consensus process and its goal of producing the most useful standard possible calls for representatives of small firms or consultancies to have the same vote as a large corporation.
Small- and medium-sized enterprises with one or two representatives have an equal footing with multinational corporate giants that have numerous representatives on a subcommittee or committee. This collective expertise should lead to more technical proficiency in a standard, but it must not lead to results that favor a certain company’s process or product.
Balance is achieved by classifying members as producers, users, consumers, and general interest — that is, their voting interest — on ASTM committees that develop standards for materials, products, systems, or services that are offered for sale. Producers may not outnumber the user, consumer, and general interest members of a subcommittee, and producers can have only 50 percent or less of the vote.According to the ASTM Regulations Governing Technical Committee Operations, on classified committees and subcommittees, members shall be classified according to voting interest. The classification of a member at the main committee may be different from the classification at the subcommittee level; however, a member classified on any subcommittee as a producer shall be classified as a producer on the main committee.
Classifications include Producer, User, Consumer, and General Interest. For more information on classification, refer to the ASTM Regulations and your Committee Bylaws.
Responsibilities for officer roles can be found in the ASTM Technical Committee Officer Handbook.
A “technical contact” is the task group chair, the proponent for a new or revised standard. This is the person who leads the group in the development of the language that makes up the standard. This person also leads the review of input and resolution of votes.
There is no obligation to attend face-to-face meetings, although many members place a great value in attending. You may participate by reviewing and voting on standards through our online balloting system.
If you are a current member, you can easily join additional committees and subcommittees from the ASTM website. Simply log in to your MyASTM account and click on the “Join Additional Committees” tab.
A collaboration area is a dedicated page on our website for a specific standards activity. For example, if you are leading the development of a new standard, you can request a collaboration area, which will allow you to (1) grant access to specific individuals assisting in the activity; (2) post drafts of the new standard as it is being developed; (3) post comments on drafts and other supporting documentation.
ASTM members receive a 10% discount on all publications, subject to verification of membership number. If you are an ASTM member, please log in when you come to the ASTM website so that we recognize your membership and apply the 10% discount to your order. If members do not log in, download products will be charged at list price. Discounts do not apply to all products and cannot be combined. When discounts overlap, the higher discount will be applied. For example, a member who orders 10 copies of a publication will receive the 25% discount.
Committee D37 on Cannabis
You do not have to be an ASTM member to join a D37 task group. To suggest a D37 task group or join an already existing D37 task group, contact D37 Staff Manager Jimmy Farrell at jfarrell@astm.org.
Please see link to technical contact checklist.
Regulators and Regulations
When compliance with a standard is not mandated by law, market participants observe standards simply because it is in their interest to do so.
The content of voluntary standards may be incorporated by reference directly into government statutes and regulations and then must be followed as a matter of law.Meetings and Symposia
You can register for upcoming meetings through one of several pages.
- All meetings can be found under the Get Involved tab on www.astm.org.
- On a committee’s homepage, you can find its upcoming meetings under Future Meetings.
- Finally, links to meetings for each committee you participate on appear on your My Committees page.
Please see link to technical contact checklist.
The event chair or subcommittee representative must complete an official proposal and submit it to the committee representative, ASTM Staff Manager, and the Symposia Manager. The sponsoring technical committee’s executive subcommittee will review the proposal for approval of the event. After approval, the ASTM Symposia Manager will begin working on event planning with the event chair. Submit your form here.
Balloting and Voting on ASTM Standards
Consensus on the content of a standard is developed using ASTM International’s balloting process. When a new standard or revisions to an existing standard are proposed, the draft language is posted to the private, members-only access side of the website. After reviewing the proposed technical content of the ballot item, members vote to approve, abstain, or vote a negative on the item. These votes are resolved by the associated subcommittee.
The administrative ballot helps task group and subcommittee leaders make progress on actions between meetings by providing a way to gather opinions and measure the degree of consensus on a topic without having to send a proposed draft out for approval and publication. Subsequent technical revisions can result from information gathered during an Administrative Ballot.
To cast your vote on an item, click on the appropriate radio button. If you choose to vote negative, affirmative with comment, or abstain with comment, a text box will automatically appear for you to provide your written statement. You can either type directly into the box, copy text from another file and paste into the box, or use the browse button (choose file button for Safari or Chrome users) to upload a document.
If you do not provide a written statement for an item for which you have voted negative, affirmative with comment, or abstain with comment, the system will not allow you to submit your ballot. A warning will appear that asks you to supply a statement or attach a statement file.
When a ballot is submitted, it is transmitted to ASTM along with the associated comments and negatives. Comments and negatives are posted to Negatives & Comments under “My Tool”’ in “My Committees” for subcommittee chairs and technical contacts.
Subcommittee chairs and technical contacts are notified when new statements are posted on a daily basis during the ballot. After the ballot closes, results will continue to be posted in this area for subcommittee chairs and technical contacts. All members may view results after the ballot closes in “Closed Ballots/Closing Reports” (from MyASTM, go to My Ballots, then select “Closed Ballots/Closing Reports”).A voting interest is defined as “an organization, a subsidiary of an organization, or an unassociated individual member having a distinctly separate interest from any other interests with regard to the scope of a committee or subcommittee,” while a voting member “has the official vote on ballots and motions concerned with ASTM standards.”
While each voting interest is allowed one voting member, the Regulations also define a non-official voting member as one “whose votes and comments on all ballots or motions shall be fully considered, but whose votes are not included in the calculation of the numerical voting requirements for standards.”
Each ASTM member, whether an official voting member or not, can vote on all Society Review items as well as on each ballot of a main committee and subcommittee to which the member belongs. Negatives and comments submitted from all ballot returns, from official and non-official voting members alike, must be considered.Cannabis Training
ASTM’s Training and eLearning Department is proud to offer continuing education units (CEUs), professional development hours (PDHs), and CPD hours for our growing catalog of training courses. Learn more.