Federal OSHA Compliant

Minnesota General Contractor Health and Safety Plan

Generate a Minnesota-specific Health and Safety Plan for general contractor contractors. Approximately 12–18 pages, customized to 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA Construction Standards).

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What's Inside Your General Contractor HASP

Site Safety Logistics & Emergency Response Plan

29 CFR 1926.2029 CFR 1910.38
Required Section

Subcontractor Safety Requirements & Coordination

29 CFR 1926.16OSHA CPL 02-00-124
Required Section

Key HASP Requirements for General Contractor in Minnesota

Site emergency response plan with hospital address

Subcontractor pre-qualification documentation

Daily safety coordination meeting schedule

Regulatory Citations Referenced

1

29 CFR 1926.20

2

29 CFR 1926.16

3

29 CFR 1926.502

4

OSHA CPL 02-00-124

General Contractor Hazards Addressed in This HASP

CRITICAL

Fall Protection

Falls are the leading cause of death in construction, accounting for ~36% of all construction fatalities annually. As the site coordinator, the GC bears primary responsibility for fall protection on multi-trade job sites, including subcontractor employees.

29 CFR 1926.50229 CFR 1926.50329 CFR 1926.451
HIGH

Electrical Loto

Multi-trade coordination creates electrocution risk, especially when electrical rough-in is energized before other trades finish work in the same area.

29 CFR 1926.41629 CFR 1910.147
HIGH

Cranes Boom Lifts

GCs coordinate crane and aerial lift operations across multiple trades. Overlapping work zones and multiple subcontractors using shared equipment creates multi-employer coordination requirements.

29 CFR 1926.140029 CFR 1926.453
MEDIUM

Chemicals Silica

GC coordinating concrete, masonry, and drywall trades that generate silica dust. Downwind workers from other trades may be exposed even if not directly cutting concrete.

29 CFR 1926.115329 CFR 1910.1200

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a Health and Safety Plan for general contractor contractors?

A Health and Safety Plan is a compliance document that GC HASP is the most comprehensive — include all hazard sections. Add subcontractor list as required attachment.. For general contractor work in Minnesota, it references 29 CFR 1926.20 and 29 CFR 1926.16.

Is a HASP required in Minnesota?

While OSHA does not always mandate a specific standalone HASP document, having one demonstrates compliance with 29 CFR Part 1926 (OSHA Construction Standards) and is typically required by general contractors during prequalification.

How many pages is a General Contractor HASP?

A typical general contractor Health and Safety Plan generated by BuildShield AI is 12–18 pages, customized to Minnesota requirements.

Can I generate a HASP in Spanish?

Yes. BuildShield AI supports bilingual document generation. You can generate both English and Spanish versions of your Health and Safety Plan to meet workforce needs.

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