Stop managing two separate safety programs. Integrate ISO 45001 with OSHA requirements (29 CFR 1910/1926) in one unified management system -- built by a consultant with a law degree who understands both the regulatory landscape and the standard.
Most U.S. organizations face two separate safety obligations that are typically managed independently -- creating duplication, confusion, and gaps that put workers at risk.
OSHA federal regulations (29 CFR 1910 and 1926) are mandatory and legally enforceable. Violations result in citations, penalties up to $165,514 per willful violation, and potential criminal prosecution. ISO 45001 is a voluntary international standard that provides a systematic management framework recognized worldwide.
The challenge? Most safety consultants understand one or the other. They know OSHA regulations but lack management system expertise -- or they know ISO standards but don't have the regulatory depth to build truly integrated compliance. Jared Clark bridges both worlds.
Mandatory federal law. Prescriptive standards. Enforcement through inspections, citations, and penalties. Focused on minimum safety requirements.
Legally RequiredVoluntary international standard. Systematic management framework. Third-party certification. Focused on continual improvement beyond compliance.
Voluntary / Best PracticeOne unified management system that satisfies OSHA requirements, earns ISO 45001 certification, and creates a proactive safety culture -- without duplication or gaps.
Best of BothThe Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 established OSHA to ensure safe and healthful working conditions. Here are the key regulatory frameworks every employer must understand.
Applies to manufacturing, warehousing, healthcare, food processing, and most non-construction workplaces.
Applies to construction, demolition, renovation, and heavy infrastructure projects.
Section 5(a)(1) of the OSH Act requires employers to provide a workplace "free from recognized hazards" -- even when no specific OSHA standard applies. This catch-all provision means OSHA can cite hazards not covered by any regulation.
OSHA inspections can be triggered by complaints, referrals, fatalities/catastrophes, or programmed inspections. Inspectors have authority to enter, inspect, and interview. Violations are classified as Other-Than-Serious, Serious, Willful, or Repeat.
Serious violations: up to $16,551 each. Willful/repeat violations: up to $165,514 each. Failure to abate: up to $16,551 per day. Criminal penalties possible for willful violations causing death. State OSHA plans may impose additional requirements.
This is what makes our approach unique. Every ISO 45001 clause has a direct connection to OSHA requirements -- and we build your system to address both simultaneously.
Understanding external and internal issues
OSHA identified as a key external issue: federal enforcement authority, applicable standards (1910/1926), state plans, and industry-specific emphasis programs
We map the full OSHA regulatory landscape to your operations during context analysis, ensuring no applicable standard is overlooked
Top management accountability
OSHA holds employers responsible for compliance. Management must allocate resources, establish accountability, and demonstrate commitment to worker safety
We build leadership commitment into management reviews that cover both ISO 45001 metrics and OSHA compliance status in one report
Proactive hazard identification
OSHA requires hazard assessments (e.g., PPE assessment under 1910.132, job hazard analysis). General Duty Clause requires recognition and correction of known hazards
ISO 45001's systematic risk assessment exceeds OSHA's minimum -- we build one hazard register that satisfies both the standard and all applicable OSHA requirements
Compliance obligations tracking
All applicable OSHA standards, General Duty Clause obligations, state OSHA plan requirements, recordkeeping rules (29 CFR 1904), and reporting deadlines
This is where Jared's legal training matters most. We build a comprehensive OSHA obligation register that maps every applicable standard to your operations, with tracking and verification
Training and competence requirements
OSHA mandates specific training: HazCom (1910.1200), LOTO (1910.147), confined space (1910.146), fall protection (1926.503), scaffolding (1926.454), and dozens more
We create a unified competence matrix that covers ISO 45001 requirements and every OSHA-mandated training program in one tracking system
Procedures and controls
OSHA requires specific written programs: LOTO procedures, confined space permits, respiratory protection programs, emergency action plans, fire prevention plans
OSHA-required written programs become controlled documents within the ISO 45001 system -- version-controlled, reviewed, and part of the PDCA cycle
Performance evaluation
OSHA recordkeeping (29 CFR 1904): OSHA 300 Log, 300A Summary, 301 Incident Report. Electronic reporting requirements. DART and TCIR rates
OSHA recordkeeping becomes part of your ISO 45001 performance monitoring -- plus leading indicators that go beyond OSHA's lagging metrics
Nonconformity and corrective action
OSHA-reportable events: fatalities within 8 hours, amputations/loss of eye/in-patient hospitalization within 24 hours. Incident investigation to identify root causes
One incident investigation procedure handles ISO 45001 nonconformity requirements and OSHA reporting obligations -- with built-in escalation triggers for reportable events
When OSHA compliance and ISO 45001 work together in one system, you get compounding benefits that neither achieves alone.
One set of procedures, one document control system, one audit program -- instead of two separate safety programs creating redundancy and confusion.
Systematic hazard identification catches issues before inspectors do. Organizations with ISO 45001 systems see 40-60% fewer recordable incidents.
Fewer incidents drive down your Experience Modification Rate, directly reducing workers' compensation insurance premiums -- often by 20-40%.
Proactive hazard control and systematic risk assessment reduce workplace injuries and illness, directly cutting workers' compensation claim frequency and severity.
ISO 45001's systematic approach goes far beyond OSHA's minimum standards, catching hazards that prescriptive regulations miss -- including psychosocial risks and emerging hazards.
ISO 45001 certification from an accredited body provides independent, auditable proof of your safety commitment -- valued by customers, insurers, and regulators alike.
A certified ISO 45001 system demonstrates a "systematic approach" to safety -- powerful evidence of good faith in OSHA contests, litigation, and regulatory proceedings.
Many RFPs and contracts now require both ISO 45001 certification and documented OSHA compliance. An integrated system satisfies both requirements with one program.
ISO 45001 Clause 6.1.3 requires organizations to identify, access, and track all applicable legal requirements. For U.S. employers, that means navigating a complex web of OSHA standards, state plan requirements, General Duty Clause obligations, and industry-specific regulations.
Most safety consultants rely on generic compliance checklists. Jared Clark's Juris Doctor gives you something different -- the ability to read, interpret, and apply the actual regulatory text. He understands how OSHA standards are structured, how enforcement discretion works, how the General Duty Clause is applied, and how to build a compliance obligation register that would hold up to legal scrutiny.
This isn't just about checking boxes. It's about building a management system where legal compliance is embedded, tracked, and continuously verified -- so when an OSHA inspector arrives or a question arises in litigation, your organization has documented evidence of a systematic approach to worker safety.
Read Jared's Full BioReads and applies OSHA regulatory text directly -- not relying on third-party summaries that may miss nuances in applicability or enforcement.
Builds Clause 6.1.3 registers with the precision and thoroughness of legal research -- mapping every applicable OSHA standard to specific operational controls.
Understands OSHA's inspection process, citation classification, penalty calculation factors, and contest procedures from a legal perspective.
Designs management system documentation that serves as evidence of due diligence in regulatory proceedings, insurance claims, and civil litigation.
No. ISO 45001 certification does not replace OSHA compliance. OSHA regulations (29 CFR 1910 and 29 CFR 1926) are federal law -- they are mandatory and legally enforceable regardless of any voluntary certifications. ISO 45001 is a voluntary international standard that provides a systematic management framework. However, a well-implemented ISO 45001 system makes OSHA compliance significantly easier by embedding regulatory tracking (Clause 6.1.3), systematic hazard identification (Clause 6.1.2), required training programs (Clause 7.2), and incident investigation procedures (Clause 10.2) into your daily operations. Think of ISO 45001 as the management system that ensures OSHA compliance is maintained consistently -- not a replacement for it.
ISO 45001 helps reduce OSHA penalties in several ways. First, the standard's systematic approach to hazard identification (Clause 6.1.2) and operational controls (Clause 8.1) means you catch and correct hazards before an OSHA inspector finds them. Second, maintaining a compliance obligation register (Clause 6.1.3) ensures you are tracking and satisfying all applicable OSHA standards proactively. Third, if a citation does occur, demonstrating a certified ISO 45001 system shows good faith -- OSHA considers an employer's safety program when determining penalty amounts. Organizations with ISO 45001 systems typically see 40-60% fewer recordable incidents, which directly reduces OSHA scrutiny and enforcement actions.
An OSHA compliance obligation register is a structured document required by ISO 45001 Clause 6.1.3 that identifies, tracks, and manages all legal and regulatory requirements applicable to your organization. For U.S. organizations, this includes applicable OSHA standards (29 CFR 1910 for general industry or 29 CFR 1926 for construction), state OSHA plan requirements, the General Duty Clause, OSHA recordkeeping requirements (29 CFR 1904), and any industry-specific standards. The register maps each obligation to specific controls, responsible parties, and compliance verification methods within your management system -- ensuring nothing falls through the cracks.
Yes, ISO 45001 certification is an excellent foundation for OSHA's Voluntary Protection Program (VPP). VPP requires organizations to demonstrate management leadership, worker involvement, worksite analysis, hazard prevention and control, and safety training -- all of which are core requirements of ISO 45001. Many VPP Star sites use ISO 45001 as their management system framework. The systematic approach, documentation, and continual improvement mechanisms built into ISO 45001 align directly with VPP evaluation criteria. Having an ISO 45001-certified system can accelerate your VPP application and demonstrate the operational maturity OSHA looks for in VPP participants.
Schedule a free consultation to discuss your ISO 45001 certification goals, OSHA compliance needs, and how we can build a safety management system that works for your organization.