IIPP — General Industry
Injury & Illness Prevention Program for general industry — shops, warehouses, landscaping, manufacturing.
Built from
WAC 296-800-140
- 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
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
Responsibility & accountability
Who owns the program, who reports up, and how compliance is enforced day-to-day.
- 2
Hazard identification
Inspection schedule, hazard categories specific to your trade, and the procedure for assessing new tasks.
- 3
Training & communication
New-hire orientation, ongoing training cadence, and the documented system for two-way safety communication.
- 4
Incident investigation
Step-by-step incident response, root-cause procedure, and corrective-action tracking.
- 5
Recordkeeping
Required logs, retention periods, and the audit trail OSHA expects to see in an inspection.
What you walk away with
- A defensible written program ready to hand to an inspector
- A training framework you can roll out to crews this week
- A clear answer to "show me your written plan" — citations on every page
- Format
- Pages
- 30–50
- Intake
- 10–15 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.
Regulatory authority
WAC 296-800-140
Authoritative source used to draft this document.
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
- CaliforniaCA
Cal/OSHA — strictest jurisdiction; additional state-specific requirements baked in.
View California variant - TexasTX
Federal OSHA jurisdiction; no separate state OSHA. Document built to federal standard.
View Texas variant - WashingtonWA
WISHA (state plan) — extra requirements on a few standards; document adapts.
View Washington variant - FloridaFL
Federal OSHA jurisdiction; no separate state OSHA. Document built to federal standard.
View Florida variant - New YorkNY
PESH (public-sector state plan); private sector under federal OSHA.
View New York variant
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.
- A complete written IIPP for general industry — shops, warehouses, landscaping, manufacturing. Covers hazard ID, training, incident investigation, and communication. Trade-specific hazards added based on Guy intake. The PDF runs 30–50 pages depending on your trade and state.
Commonly bought together
Contractors who buy this document typically also need these.
- anchor$299
IIPP — Construction
Injury & Illness Prevention Program for construction employers. Trade-specific hazards, controls, citations.
Cal/OSHA §3203 / 29 CFR 1910.5
- anchor$99
Workplace Violence Prevention Plan
Required for every CA employer July 1 2024. Covers all four violence types, incident log, training.
CA Labor Code §6401.9 (SB 553)
- anchor$129
Site-Specific Safety Plan
Project-level safety plan covering hazards, emergency contacts, subs, and jurisdiction-specific requirements.
29 CFR 1926.16 / Cal/OSHA Title 8