40 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.
40 CFR is one of the largest titles. Searching it as one document is a luxury.
PDFs from last year, still in circulation.
The version of the rule your team trains on is the version that was current when you printed it.
Cross-references to standards you don’t track.
Your industry’s primary standard pulls in adjacent rules from other agencies. Tracking the boundary is manual.
Inspections cite paragraphs you barely know.
Inspectors cite paragraphs from sub-parts most teams cover lightly. Defensible response requires reading them now, not later.
40 CFR, organized by domain, searchable as one document.
Search across your industry’s primary CFR titles.
Title-scoped search with industry shorthand handled. PRCS, LOTO, JHA, DOT-HM-181, all recognized.
Cross-references rendered as clicks.
Every ‘see § X’ pointer becomes a one-click expand. Letters of Interpretation linked inline.
Federal Register sync, scoped to your titles.
When something changes in your industry’s standards, you get one email. Skip the rest.
Environmental compliance lives at every facility.
Air emissions, water discharge, waste handling, toxic substance reporting, environmental compliance touches manufacturing, energy, transportation, and most heavy industry. Each domain has its own 40 CFR Part, its own permitting structure, and its own enforcement agency at the state level.
RegLogic ships 40 CFR with the cross-references between Parts already drawn, the state-level permitting overlays linked where State Editions are available, and the EPA enforcement memos surfaced as related guidance.
For environmental compliance officers, that’s the difference between a regulatory program and a regulatory archaeology project.