OSHA doesn't knock. When the inspector walks your site, every foreman needs the answer — not a binder in the trailer. RegLogic puts the entire CFR in their pocket.
Construction accounts for the highest number of OSHA violations year after year. The "Fatal Four" — falls, struck-by, electrocution, caught-in/between — are preventable. But when your crew doesn't have instant access to the standard, they're guessing. And guessing costs lives, money, and licenses.
Workplace injuries cost the U.S. construction industry $170 billion per year. Most stem from violations that are well-documented — if you can find the standard in time.
$170B / year in injury costsYour safety binders are outdated the moment they're printed. CFR updates happen constantly. Crews reference stale standards, and OSHA knows it.
Standards update 50+ times/yearOSHA doesn't schedule visits. When an inspector walks your jobsite, there's no time to run to the trailer. Your foreman either knows the standard or he doesn't.
Zero advance warningRegLogic replaces every safety binder, laminated pocket guide, and outdated printout with one searchable app — built for the jobsite.
When the inspector asks about your scaffold standards, your superintendent pulls up 1926.451 in three seconds — not three minutes digging through a filing cabinet.
Gloves, dust, no signal — doesn't matter. RegLogic works offline, on any device, in any condition. Your crew gets the answer wherever the work happens.
Every regulation is stored locally on the device. No cell tower, no Wi-Fi, no problem. Your crew accesses standards in concrete bunkers, remote sites, and underground.
Type "scaffold" and get 1926.451 instantly. Type "fall protection" and get 1926.501. No table of contents, no page flipping — just the answer, now.
Full construction standards (29 CFR 1926) and general industry standards (29 CFR 1910) — complete, current, and always up to date. No gaps, no guessing.
Raw CFR text is dense legalese. RegLogic restructures it into scannable, hierarchical layouts — tables, indentation, and cross-references that make sense at a glance.
A site superintendent gets a surprise OSHA inspection. Instead of scrambling for binders in the job trailer, he pulls up the exact scaffold standard — 1926.451 — on his phone in 3 seconds. The inspector sees current regs, properly formatted. No citation. No delay. No $15,000 fine.
29 CFR 1926.451 — ScaffoldingGive your superintendents, foremen, and safety managers instant access to every OSHA construction standard — on any device, on any jobsite.