OSHA 1926 regulated forms.
Job Safety Analysis. Lockout/Tagout. Hot Work Permits. Confined Space Permits with air monitoring. Toolbox Talks. The set a 1926 inspector expects.
General contractors. Self-perform crews. Subcontractors crossing state lines every week. OSHA 1926 alignment in the regulated forms. Bilingual voice capture on the frontlines for crews whose first language isn't English. Module-level access control so a sub can see the JSA without seeing the WC file.
Most platforms hand you a generic form library. We came with the construction subset already configured.
Job Safety Analysis. Lockout/Tagout. Hot Work Permits. Confined Space Permits with air monitoring. Toolbox Talks. The set a 1926 inspector expects.
The 300 log writes itself from the incident records on the dashboard. The 301 form is one click. The audit copy is the live record, not an export of an export.
Structured root cause analysis. Every recommended corrective action cites the section of the regulation. The auditor verifies the citation against the code.
Cal/OSHA on one job, federal on the next. The profile is configured per site. The forms and the indicators adjust.
A worker taps the voice button on the tablet, speaks an incident narrative in English or Spanish, and routing fires within seconds. The supervisor isn't the translator.
The worker's words stay attached to the incident. The structured fields come from the transcript, not from a form filled in two hours later.
Pulse tablets built for gloved hands. Voice button on the lock screen. Survives the trailer, the truck bed, and the rain.
A subcontractor foreman can see the JSA and the toolbox talk but not the GC's workers' comp claims. The matrix is the source of truth.
Every sub on the project tracked. Insurance documents on file. Safety rating updated from their incident record on your job, not their marketing PDF.
OSHA inspectors and third-party auditors sign in scoped to the audit window. The ledger captures every view.
A 10-page whitepaper on construction recordkeeping when half the workforce is not yours. Who logs the incident, who owns the corrective action, and how the records reconcile at the end of the job.
Download: OSHA 1926 Incident Management for the Contractor Workforce (PDF)
Civil. Vertical. Heavy highway. The demo walks through OSHA 1926 forms, bilingual voice capture, and the contractor-grade RBAC matrix on your project profile.