Powered 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.
Warehousing safety is scattered across 1910.
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.
Warehousing as a topic, not a scattered subset.
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.
Distribution centers run on PIT and walking-working surfaces.
29 CFR § 1910.178 (powered industrial trucks) is the most-cited warehouse standard. § 1910.176 (handling materials) and Subpart D (walking-working surfaces) are the next two.
Most General Industry training programs cover these lightly because they’re scattered. RegLogic surfaces them as a coherent ‘warehousing’ topic, search by topic, not by Subpart, and the relevant citations come back together.
For DC operators, this is the difference between a warehouse safety program and a generic GI training pulled off a shelf.