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Monday Safety
Specialty programAll 50 states

Crane Safety Program

Operator certification, assembly/disassembly, inspection, signal persons, ground conditions.

Built from

29 CFR 1926 Subpart CC

  • Conversational intake with Guy — no blank forms
  • Citations on every page — defensible at inspection
  • Delivered as a polished PDF in minutes
  • 10 days of free edits included
Top state variants: California · Texas · Washington · Florida · New York

What’s in this document

Every section is written to match the regulatory citation — not a generic template. Your answers to Guy shape the trade-specific content.

Sections covered

  1. 1

    Regulated scope

    Exact tasks, equipment, or substances the program governs — with regulatory citations.

  2. 2

    Competent person

    Designation, qualifications, and authority of the competent person required for this work.

  3. 3

    Pre-work planning

    Site assessment, permits, and the documentation required before work starts.

  4. 4

    Controls & monitoring

    Required controls (engineering, work practice, PPE) and exposure or condition monitoring procedures.

  5. 5

    Training & records

    Trade-specific training elements, certification, and required records.

What you walk away with

  • A trade-specific written plan calibrated to your scope of work
  • Pre-built competent-person and inspection forms inside the document
  • Citations on every page — defensible at OSHA inspection
Format
PDF
Pages
20–35
Intake
10–20 min
Citations
On every page

Regulatory basis

Built from these citations

Every section in this document maps to a published regulation. The citation appears on every page so an inspector can verify scope without asking you.

Defensible at inspection
  1. Federal OSHA — Construction (29 CFR 1926)

    29 CFR 1926 Subpart CC

    Cranes and Derricks in Construction — operator certification, signal persons, ground conditions.

Where this document applies

This document applies in all 50 states. The base document is built from federal OSHA. During intake, Guy adapts the language and requirements for your specific state — Cal/OSHA, state-plan states, and federal-OSHA jurisdictions each have their own variations.

Top state variants

Not sure which version you need?

Guy asks for your jurisdiction during intake and configures the document automatically. You don’t have to know the right answer up front.

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about this document, intake, and updates.

  • Operator certification, assembly/disassembly, inspection, signal persons, ground conditions. The document is built from 29 CFR 1926 Subpart CC and includes every written element OSHA expects to see during an inspection. The PDF runs 20–35 pages depending on your trade and state.