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regLogic®
About

Mancomm has been publishing the CFR for 30 years. RegLogic is the next chapter.

Founded in Bastrop, Texas in 1996, Mancomm has been the regulatory publishing partner of safety professionals for three decades. The books on every safety manager’s desk that say ‘OSHA regulations’ on the spine are ours. RegLogic carries that editorial discipline onto the screen.

EST. 1996
30
years of regulatory publishing
Bastrop, Texas
Print catalog
200+ titles
Languages
English, Spanish
Origin

From print, to print & digital, to digital-first.

Mancomm was founded in 1996 to do one thing, publish the OSHA regulations in a format people could actually read. The CFR’s official typesetting is dense, undifferentiated, and structurally hostile to the people who have to comply with it. Mancomm’s founders developed a publishing format, what would later be trademarked as RegLogic CFR®, that introduced color-coded outlining, tabbed subsections, paragraph references, and a navigable index. Compliance professionals adopted the format fast. The phrase ‘the Mancomm book’ became shorthand in the industry.

Over the next two decades, the catalog grew. 29 CFR 1910 (General Industry). 29 CFR 1926 (Construction). 49 CFR (Transportation). EM 385-1-1 (USACE). Spanish-language parallel editions for bilingual training. State-specific Driver Quick Reference Guides. Cornerstone training programs. Hundreds of compliance posters, quick reference guides, and instructor materials.

In 2024, we started building RegLogic, the digital platform that brings 30 years of regulatory publishing experience to the screen. Same editorial discipline. Same currency rigor. New surface. The first version shipped in 2025. The platform you’re looking at today, getreglogic.com, launched in 2026, alongside the State Editions program co-developed with the Texas Trucking Association.

Team

The people building RegLogic.

Ben Mangan
CEO
Ray
CTO
Randall
Editorial / RegLogic
James Jackson Leach
Head of Digital Revenue
Values

What we believe.

01

Currency is a feature.

A regulatory reference that’s a year out of date isn’t reference; it’s historical fiction. Currency is the first thing the platform has to deliver, every time.

02

Editorial discipline beats automation alone.

Most regulatory amendments parse cleanly. About 10% don’t. Trying to automate around the 10% produces drift. We have humans review the ambiguous cases. That’s the difference between a feed and a publisher.

03

Cross-references are content, not metadata.

Treating ‘see § 1910.135’ as a navigation hint is what makes regulation feel impenetrable. Treating it as content, rendered as a click, is what makes regulation feel like a navigable document.

04

Print and digital are companions, not competitors.

A binder on the desk and a search bar in the browser solve different problems. We sell both. The Mancomm catalog is the print companion to the RegLogic platform.

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