NCDOL OSH Compliant

North Carolina Roofing Safety Plan

Generate a North Carolina-specific OSHA safety program for roofing contractors in 5 minutes. Customized to 13 NCAC Chapters 7A–7F (NC Occupational Safety and Health Standards) — ready for GC prequalification and OSHA inspections.

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North Carolina OSHA Requirements for Roofing Contractors

Regulatory Authority: North Carolina operates an OSHA-approved State Plan enforced by NC Department of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health Division (NCDOL OSH). State Plan states can exceed federal OSHA minimums.

Primary Regulation: 13 NCAC Chapters 7A–7F (NC Occupational Safety and Health Standards)

Fine Exposure: Serious violations: up to $16,550. Willful/repeat: up to $165,514.

Key North Carolina Requirements

NC OSH Adopts Federal Standards by Reference13 NCAC 07F

North Carolina adopts federal OSHA construction standards by reference and applies them as state law. The standards are effectively identical to federal OSHA for construction. NC uses federal penalty levels.

NC Elevator and Amusement Device BureauNC G.S. 95-110 through 95-119.1

Crane/hoist work on construction sites must comply with NC Elevator and Amusement Device Bureau requirements in addition to OSHA crane standards.

Roofing Safety Plan — What's Included

29 CFR 1926.502Fall Protection Systems Criteria and Practices
29 CFR 1926.503Training Requirements (Fall Protection)
29 CFR 1926.500Fall Protection — Scope, Application, and Definitions
29 CFR 1926.1053Ladders
29 CFR 1926.451General Requirements — Scaffolding
29 CFR 1926.100Head Protection

Primary Hazards Covered

Fall Protection (Critical)Chemicals SilicaElectrical LotoCranes Boom Lifts

Required Safety Training for Roofing in North Carolina

Fall Protection Training

Citation: 29 CFR 1926.503

Frequency: Before first exposure; retraining when deficiencies observed

Minimum Hours: 2

Ladder Safety Training

Citation: 29 CFR 1926.1060

Frequency: Before first use

Hazard Communication (HazCom)

Citation: 29 CFR 1910.1200

Frequency: Before first exposure to hazardous chemical; annually refreshed

Heat Illness Prevention

Citation: 29 CFR 1926.21 + OSHA General Duty Clause

Frequency: Annually before heat season; new worker orientation

Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) Training

Citation: 29 CFR 1926.95(d)

Frequency: Before use; when new PPE assigned

PPE Requirements for Roofing Contractors

EquipmentStandardOSHA CitationWhen Required
Full-body harnessANSI/ASSP Z359.1129 CFR 1926.502(d)All work at 6+ feet above lower level (4 feet in Michigan per MIOSHA CSS Part 45)
Hard hat (Class E)ANSI/ISEA Z89.129 CFR 1926.100Where overhead hazards or falling objects present
Safety-toed bootsASTM F241329 CFR 1926.96All rooftop work
High-visibility vest (Class 2)ANSI/ISEA 10729 CFR 1926.20Near roadway or vehicle traffic
Respirator (N95 or better)NIOSH 42 CFR Part 8429 CFR 1926.1153Silica-generating tear-off, hot asphalt fumes
Heat-resistant glovesEN 407 or ASTM F179029 CFR 1926.95Hot bitumen/asphalt application

Most Common OSHA Citations for Roofing Contractors

These are the most frequently cited OSHA standards during inspections of roofing work sites. Having a documented safety program that addresses each standard significantly reduces your citation risk.

1

29 CFR 1926.502 — Fall protection systems criteria

2

29 CFR 1926.503 — Fall protection training

3

29 CFR 1926.1053 — Ladders

4

29 CFR 1926.100 — Head protection

5

29 CFR 1910.1200 — HazCom (asphalt SDS)

Inspection Requirements for Roofing in North Carolina

Daily pre-work inspection of all PFAS equipment (harnesses, lanyards, anchors)

Inspect roof deck for structural integrity before workers access

Inspect ladders before each use — tag and remove any defective ladders

Weekly jobsite safety inspection — document with photos

After any storm or weather event — re-inspect all equipment and roof surfaces

Documents Included in Your North Carolina Roofing Package

Pro subscribers get all 7 document types. Free users can preview any type.

IIPP

Injury & Illness Prevention Program

Customized for North Carolina · Roofing · 12–16 pages

HASP

Health and Safety Plan (HASP)

Customized for North Carolina · Roofing · 8–12 pages

JHA

Job Hazard Analysis (JHA)

Customized for North Carolina · Roofing · 6–10 pages

EAP

Emergency Action Plan (EAP)

Customized for North Carolina · Roofing · 4–6 pages

Toolbox

Toolbox Talk Safety Meeting Pack

Customized for North Carolina · Roofing · 10–14 pages

Specialty

Specialty Safety & Compliance Program

Customized for North Carolina · Roofing · 10–14 pages

Checklist

OSHA Site Inspection Checklist

Customized for North Carolina · Roofing · 4–6 pages

Frequently Asked Questions

Does North Carolina have its own OSHA standards for roofing contractors?

Yes. North Carolina operates a State Plan under NCDOL OSH, which has authority to adopt standards that are at least as effective as federal OSHA. North Carolina adopts federal OSHA construction standards by reference and applies them as state law. The standards are effectively identical to federal OSHA for construction. NC uses federal penalty levels.

Is a written safety plan legally required for roofing contractors in North Carolina?

While North Carolina follows federal OSHA's general duty clause (Section 5(a)(1)), having a written safety program is considered best practice and is required by most general contractors during prequalification. OSHA can cite employers without a written program.

What are the OSHA fine amounts in North Carolina?

In North Carolina, serious OSHA violations carry fines up to $16,550 per violation. Willful or repeat violations can reach $165,514 per violation. Failure to abate a cited hazard adds up to $16,550 per day.

What documents do roofing contractors typically need for prequalification?

Most general contractors and owners (ISNetworld, Avetta, Browz, Procore) require: (1) Written Safety Program (IIPP or HASP), (2) OSHA 300 Log for prior 3 years, (3) Experience Modification Rate (EMR) below 1.0, (4) Proof of worker's comp and liability insurance, and (5) Competent Person certifications for applicable trades. BuildShield AI generates documents 1 and 4 instantly.

How quickly can I generate a North Carolina Roofing safety plan?

In 5 minutes or less. Enter your company name, select your state and trade, identify your key hazards, and name your designated competent person. BuildShield AI assembles a North Carolina-specific document referencing 13 NCAC Chapters 7A–7F (NC Occupational Safety and Health Standards) and your trade's OSHA standards.

What safety training is required for roofing workers in North Carolina?

Key training requirements include: Fall Protection Training (29 CFR 1926.503); Ladder Safety Training (29 CFR 1926.1060); Hazard Communication (HazCom) (29 CFR 1910.1200). All training must be documented and records retained for at least 3 years.

What PPE does OSHA require for roofing contractors?

Required PPE includes: Full-body harness, Hard hat (Class E), Safety-toed boots, High-visibility vest (Class 2). Employers must provide PPE at no cost to employees and train them on proper use per 29 CFR 1926.95.

What are the most common OSHA citations for roofing contractors?

The most frequently cited standards for roofing work include: 29 CFR 1926.502 — Fall protection systems criteria; 29 CFR 1926.503 — Fall protection training; 29 CFR 1926.1053 — Ladders. Having a documented safety plan that addresses these standards significantly reduces citation risk.

What does a Competent Person do on a roofing job site?

Per OSHA, a Competent Person must be capable of identifying hazards and authorized to correct them. For roofing work: Must be capable of identifying fall hazards and authorized to correct them immediately (29 CFR 1926.32(f)). BuildShield AI includes a Competent Person designation section in every generated document.

What daily inspections are required for roofing work?

Required inspections include: Daily pre-work inspection of all PFAS equipment (harnesses, lanyards, anchors); Inspect roof deck for structural integrity before workers access; Inspect ladders before each use — tag and remove any defective ladders. BuildShield AI generates an OSHA-compliant site inspection checklist specific to roofing work.

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