Different industries. Different titles. Same platform.
Each industry below has a different regulatory stack, different CFR titles, different agencies, different cross-references. RegLogic ships coverage for all of them.
Construction compliance, every site, every standard.
Subpart M (Fall Protection), Subpart P (Excavations), Subpart CC (Cranes), current text, with the Letters of Interpretation your training relies on, in one place.
Learn more29 CFR 1910, and everything that connects to it.
From § 1910.132 PPE to § 1910.1200 HazCom to § 1910.146 Confined Spaces, the General Industry standard with cross-references already drawn.
Learn moreShipyard, longshoring, marine terminals, three boundaries, one platform.
Maritime compliance lives across three OSHA standards with overlapping but distinct boundaries. RegLogic surfaces the boundaries, not just the citations.
Learn more49 CFR Parts 100–399, current to last night.
FMCSA, PHMSA, and DOT rules in one place, including the FMCSRs, HMRs, and PHMSA emergency orders, linked end-to-end.
Learn more49 CFR HazMat, packaging, marking, training, exceptions.
From § 173 (packaging) to § 172 (Subpart H training) to § 100.1 exceptions, the HMR with its 49 CFR cross-references and § 1910.120 OSHA HAZWOPER overlap already drawn.
Learn more40 CFR for the people who actually have to comply.
Air (Parts 50–99), water (Parts 100–149), waste (Parts 240–299), toxics (Parts 700–799), drinking water (Parts 140–149), searchable as one document.
Learn moreUtility compliance across OSHA, DOT, and EPA.
Electric power generation, oil and gas pipelines, and environmental discharge, three regulatory domains, one platform, one search.
Learn moreFrom the OSHA standards to the EPA permitting overlay.
Manufacturing compliance is a multi-regulatory job. RegLogic puts OSHA, EPA, and DOT in one place, with the cross-references between them rendered as clicks.
Learn morePowered industrial trucks, walking-working surfaces, and the 1910 sub-standards every DC depends on.
Warehousing compliance lives in pieces of 1910 most General Industry trainers don’t focus on. We surface them as a coherent topic.
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