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INDUSTRY

29 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.

What’s hard about this today

29 CFR 1910 is broad. The connections between subparts matter.

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.

How RegLogic helps

Every Subpart, every defined term, every Letter of Interpretation.

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.

Why this matters

General Industry is the OSHA standard most teams live in.

29 CFR 1910 covers PPE (Subpart I), HazCom (Subpart Z), Confined Spaces (Subpart J), Walking-Working Surfaces (Subpart D), Process Safety Management (§ 1910.119), and dozens of other rule clusters that compliance teams rely on every day.

The connections between Subparts matter. PPE training (§ 1910.132(f)) references the hazard assessment in (d). HazCom training (§ 1910.1200(h)) references your written program. Confined Space rescue (§ 1910.146(k)) references the entry permit in (c).

RegLogic renders those connections as clicks. Search a section, see the cross-references, jump straight to them. The way the regulation is structured becomes the way you read it.

Ready to make 1910 navigable?