What RAVS reviewers are usually looking for
- A written program that names responsibilities and procedures.
- Content that matches the contractor’s actual trade and work scope.
- Documentation that can be uploaded, reviewed, revised, and explained by supervisors.
- State-plan details when the contractor works in California, Washington, Oregon, Minnesota, or another state OSHA jurisdiction.
CrewCompliance vs a static RAVS bundle
- Bundles can include dozens of documents, but not every document applies to every contractor.
- CrewCompliance starts with your company context and generates the program around your trade and state.
- The goal is a cleaner submittal: fewer irrelevant sections, more relevant hazard coverage.
Related RAVS-focused program areas
- Hazard Communication.
- Fall protection and roofing safety.
- Respiratory protection and silica exposure control.
- Heat illness prevention.
- Electrical safety and lockout/tagout.
- California IIPP and other state-plan programs.
Related contractor safety resources
Core hubs
OSHA safety programs · OSHA safety manual · Free safety program checklist · ISNetworld RAVS safety programs · Avetta safety programs
Existing program pages
Construction safety program for contractors · Written safety program for small contractors · Roofing safety program · Electrical safety program · HVAC safety program · Hazard Communication program · Respiratory Protection program · Heat Illness Prevention plan · California IIPP for contractors
Trust and validation
Sample safety program preview · Regulatory sources and update log
Common questions
No. ISNetworld and hiring-client requirements vary. CrewCompliance generates written safety documentation designed to support RAVS and prequalification reviews, but reviewers may request client-specific revisions.
CrewCompliance focuses on generating the written safety program around trade and state context. Workflow tools may track documents or draft answers; static bundles provide prewritten files. CrewCompliance’s wedge is fast customization.
Yes. Written safety programs are one part of prequalification. COIs, EMR letters, OSHA logs, training records, and client-specific forms may also be required.
Generate a state + trade-specific program
CrewCompliance is designed for contractors who need practical written safety documentation quickly. It is not a law firm and does not replace professional legal or safety review for unusual operations, but it gives you a stronger starting point than a generic manual.