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Provincial Safety Association

COR® Issuing Authority

Alberta / National

COR® Issuing Authority Letter

Issued by Provincial Safety Association

Valid for Aligned with COR® certification cycle

What is COR® Issuing Authority?

The COR® Issuing Authority letter confirms which provincial construction safety association certified and issued a company's COR® designation. Since COR® is administered through multiple certifying partners across Canada, this document verifies the specific authority that conducted the audit and granted certification. It provides traceability and legitimacy to the company's COR® status, confirming the certification was issued through a recognized CFCSA partner.

Companies that hold COR® certification and need to demonstrate the legitimacy of their certification to clients, general contractors, or project owners — especially when working across provincial boundaries. Some contract prequalification processes specifically request the issuing authority documentation alongside the COR® certificate itself.

Why Expiration Tracking Matters

The issuing authority letter is tied to the company's COR® certification cycle. When COR® is renewed through annual maintenance or external audits, the issuing authority documentation should also be updated. An outdated issuing authority letter may not reflect the current certification status and could raise questions during prequalification reviews.

Provincial Requirements & Regulations

Each province has designated certifying partners that can issue COR®. In Alberta, certifying partners include organizations like ACSA, ENFORM, and others. British Columbia's BCSA, Saskatchewan's SCSA, and Manitoba's CSAM serve similar roles in their provinces. The CFCSA coordinates the national program and recognizes certifications issued by any member association.

Renewal Process

The issuing authority letter is typically updated alongside COR® renewal. When a company completes its annual maintenance audit or 3-year external audit, the certifying partner issues updated documentation. Companies should request an updated issuing authority letter each time their COR® is renewed.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Not keeping the issuing authority letter alongside the COR® certificate — both may be requested during prequalification
  • Assuming COR® from any province is automatically recognized by all certifying partners — verify interprovincial recognition
  • Not updating the issuing authority documentation when changing certifying partners
  • Losing track of which certifying partner issued the original COR®, complicating renewal

How WorkSitePass Helps You Manage COR® Issuing Authority

WorkSitePass stores your COR® Issuing Authority letter alongside your COR® certificate, keeping all related documents organized in one place. Track renewal dates and present complete COR® documentation instantly when requested by clients or during prequalification.

Issuing Authority

Provincial Safety Association

Provincial Safety Association

cfcsa.ca

Frequently Asked Questions

It's a document that confirms which provincial construction safety association certified and issued your company's COR® designation, providing traceability and verification of your certification.

Some prequalification processes and general contractors require both documents to verify the legitimacy of your COR® certification — the certificate shows you're certified, the authority letter shows who certified you.

It's tied to your COR® certification cycle. When you renew COR®, you should also obtain an updated issuing authority letter to keep your documentation current.

Yes, companies can switch certifying partners, though the process varies by province. Your new certifying partner will issue updated documentation. WorkSitePass helps you track these transitions and keep records organized.

Start Tracking Your COR® Issuing Authority Certificate Today

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