Construction Compliance
Construction Compliance for Small and Mid-Size GCs
For a small or mid-size general contractor, compliance means being able to produce current, genuine documentation — for the company and for every worker — the day someone asks for it. The two layers are distinct: worker-level credentials (training certificates) and company-level documents (insurance, workers’ compensation clearance, safety program), and most compliance failures happen in the gap between them.
What does compliance actually mean for a 10-30 worker GC?
Strip away the consultant language and compliance is three questions asked by three people. An inspector asks: is every worker on this site trained and current for the work they are doing? A client’s procurement team asks: can you prove insurance, workers’ compensation clearance, and a safety program before we award this contract? Your own supervisor asks: who on tomorrow’s crew is cleared to work?
A GC that can answer all three from one system, in minutes, is compliant in every way that matters. A GC that answers them by digging through email attachments is gambling that nobody asks on a bad week.
Worker-level vs company-level compliance — what’s the difference?
Worker-level compliance is training: Working at Heights, First Aid/CPR, WHMIS, and trade-specific tickets, each with its own issuer, validity period, and renewal path. It travels with the person.
Company-level compliance is paperwork about the business: Certificate of Insurance (CGL), workers’ compensation clearance (WSIB in Ontario, WorkSafeBC, CNESST in Québec), COR® certification where clients require it, business registration, and bonding. It travels with the contract — and it is what gets requested most often, because every GC-to-sub relationship starts with it.
The two layers fail differently. Worker credentials fail by expiring quietly. Company documents fail by being requested urgently — a clearance certificate that takes three days to produce can cost a contract that closes in two.
How do you handle a compliance package request?
A compliance package is the bundle a GC or owner requests before work begins: typically the COI, workers’ comp clearance, safety program summary, and proof of training for the crew being deployed. The request usually arrives compressed — “by end of week” — because it sits on the critical path of someone else’s contract.
The GCs that handle these calmly keep the package pre-assembled: documents current, expiry-tracked, and exportable in one action. The ones that scramble treat each request as a new project. We wrote up a real example of how these requests unfold in the field — see the Field Notes link below.
What does an inspector or auditor actually ask for?
Training records for the workers present that day, proof the training is current, and — depending on the visit — the company’s safety program and incident records. Inspectors treat expired, unapproved, or unverifiable training as non-compliant; a certificate nobody can validate is functionally the same as no certificate.
During manual verification we regularly find documents that would fail this exact test: reference numbers that do not match the issuer’s records, or reissued cards whose validity actually ran from an earlier completion date. Verifying before the audit is cheap; discovering during one is not.
Foire aux questions
Certificate of Insurance (CGL), workers’ compensation clearance certificate, a safety program or policy summary, business registration, and current training records for the deployed crew. Clients with COR® requirements will ask for that certification as well.
On their own cycles: COIs annually with the policy, WSIB/WorkSafeBC clearances every 90 days or per contract, COR® annually. Track each expiry the same way you track worker certificates — the mechanics are identical.
The structure is parallel but the documents differ: ACORD 25 Certificate of Insurance, state workers’ compensation insurance, a written safety program, state business license, and surety bond where required. OSHA 10/30 cards replace provincial training tickets at the worker level.
Ressources connexes
Certificate
Certificate of Insurance (CGL)
The most-requested company document.
Read moreCertificate
Workers’ Compensation Clearance
WSIB / WorkSafeBC / CNESST clearances explained.
Read moreField Notes
The Compliance Package Request
How the "by end of week" request actually unfolds.
Read moreField Notes
What We Actually Check
Inside the manual verification process.
Read moreProduct
WorkSitePass Company Documents
Company-level document tracking with expiry alerts.
Read moreProduct
WorkSitePass Plans
14-day free trial, no credit card.
Read more