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CFCSA

COR® Certificate (Company)

Alberta / National

Certificate of Recognition (COR®) — Company Level

Issued by CFCSA

Valid for 1 year (annual audit), 3 years (external audit)

What is COR® Certificate (Company)?

The Certificate of Recognition (COR®) at the company level certifies that a construction company has implemented a health and safety management system that meets or exceeds established industry standards. Unlike individual worker certifications, COR® is awarded to the company as a whole after a certified auditor evaluates the organization's safety policies, procedures, training programs, and incident management processes. It is administered through the Canadian Federation of Construction Safety Associations (CFCSA) and its provincial partners.

Construction companies bidding on government contracts, working as subcontractors for major general contractors, or operating in provinces like Alberta where COR® is an industry standard. In Alberta, COR® is practically required for any company working on larger projects. Companies with COR® also qualify for Workers' Compensation Board premium rebates (up to 20% in some provinces), making it both a compliance requirement and a financial incentive.

Why Expiration Tracking Matters

COR® requires annual maintenance audits and a full external audit every 3 years. If the annual audit is missed or the company scores below the required threshold (typically 80%), COR® certification lapses. Losing COR® means losing WCB premium rebates, contract eligibility, and the ability to demonstrate safety commitment to clients. Re-certification after a lapse can take months.

Provincial Requirements & Regulations

COR® programs exist across multiple provinces, each administered through provincial construction safety associations. Alberta's program (through ACSA and partner certifying bodies) is the largest and most established. British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and other provinces also offer COR® through their respective associations. The audit criteria and scoring are generally consistent nationally through the CFCSA framework, but provincial certifying partners may have additional requirements.

Renewal Process

Maintaining COR® requires an annual internal maintenance audit plus a full external audit by a certified auditor every 3 years. Companies must score at least 80% on external audits. The audit covers management leadership, hazard assessment, training, inspections, emergency response, incident investigation, and program administration. Planning audits well in advance is essential — scheduling a certified auditor can take weeks.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Missing the annual maintenance audit deadline, causing COR® to lapse and losing WCB rebate eligibility
  • Not maintaining proper documentation between audits — auditors review records from the full audit period
  • Treating COR® as a paper exercise rather than an active safety management system
  • Not budgeting for the cost of external audits every 3 years — certified auditor fees can be significant

How WorkSitePass Helps You Manage COR® Certificate (Company)

WorkSitePass stores your company's COR® certificate, tracks the annual audit date and 3-year external audit cycle, and sends automated alerts before each deadline. Keep your COR® documentation organized alongside all other company credentials in one digital wallet.

Issuing Authority

Frequently Asked Questions

Worker COR® training teaches individuals about their employer's safety management system. Company COR® is the organizational certification awarded after the company's entire safety program passes a professional audit.

Companies with active COR® certification qualify for WCB premium rebates — up to 20% in Alberta. This can represent significant annual savings, often covering the cost of the audit program several times over.

Initial COR® certification typically takes 6-12 months. Companies must first develop or formalize their safety management system, then undergo an external audit by a certified auditor. The timeline depends on the company's existing safety practices.

While not legally mandated everywhere, COR® is practically required in Alberta for companies bidding on larger projects. Many general contractors across Canada require subcontractors to hold COR® or an equivalent safety certification.

Start Tracking Your COR® Certificate (Company) Certificate Today

Upload your certificate, set the expiry date, and let WorkSitePass handle the rest. Never miss a renewal deadline again.