The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has long been the regulatory backbone for workplace safety in the United States, setting and enforcing standards to protect employees from ...
Construction remains one of the most hazardous industries in the U.S., and OSHA’s new 2025 regulations raise the bar for compliance. With the industry still accounting for more than one in five ...
The way large buildings get inspected is changing. Fast. In fiscal year 2024, OSHA conducted 34,625 inspections across American workplaces, and what they found hasn't changed much over the years - the ...
Digital inspections provide consistent documentation and compliance tracking across job sites, facilities, and construction projects. Digital inspection software adoption rises as OSHA fire safety ...
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