The flow
How violation detection works
- 1
Walk the site with a phone
Snap photos of any zone — scaffolding, edges, electrical, excavation, lifts.
- 2
AI scans for OSHA violations
Trained on the Fatal Four — falls, struck-by, caught-between, electrocution — plus standard housekeeping violations.
- 3
Findings cited to 29 CFR 1926
Example: 29 CFR 1926.501(b)(1) — fall protection at 6 ft. Every finding tied to a specific subpart.
- 4
Severity assigned to each finding
Critical, Major, Minor — based on OSHA's own classification of de minimis vs serious vs willful.
- 5
Safety certificate generated
Landscape PDF with QR code, signed by inspector, ready for the client binder or weekly toolbox talk.
OSHA priorities
The Fatal Four — primary focus areas
Falls
29 CFR 1926 Subpart M — guardrails, harnesses, holes, edges, leading edges.
Struck-by
Subparts L, N — falling objects, swinging loads, vehicles, debris.
Caught-between
Subparts O, P — trenching, excavation, moving equipment, machinery.
Electrocution
Subpart K — overhead lines, GFCIs, lockout/tagout, exposed wiring.
The output
What the safety certificate looks like
- Landscape PDF with embedded site photos and red-box callouts on each finding
- Specific 29 CFR 1926 clause cited beside every violation
- Signed by inspector, with QR code linking back to the live record
- Sequentially numbered for audit traceability
- Sent to PM, GC, and safety officer in one tap
Recurring audits
Scheduled site inspections
Configure weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly safety walks. Flaggity reminds the responsible inspector, opens a draft inspection record with the previous walk's findings pre-loaded for verification, and notifies the safety officer if a walk is missed.
- Weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly schedules per project
- Auto-assigned to responsible inspector
- Previous-walk findings pre-loaded for verification
- Missed-walk escalation to safety officer