GC Requirement: Most GCs require a separate JHA for each task or scope of work. A generic safety plan does not replace a task-specific Job Hazard Analysis.
A complete Job Hazard Analysis following OSHA Publication 3071 methodology, customized for your specific task and trade.
Your specific task broken into 8-14 sequential steps — from setup through completion and cleanup.
OSHA Pub. 3071
2-4 specific hazards identified for each task step — not generic, but specific to your trade and task.
OSHA Pub. 3071
2-4 specific controls for each identified hazard — actionable measures your crew can follow step by step.
OSHA Pub. 3071
Required personal protective equipment for this task with specific ratings, standards, and inspection procedures.
29 CFR 1926.95
Task-specific training requirements with OSHA references, frequency, and documentation needs.
29 CFR 1926.21
Task-specific emergency response — the most likely emergencies during this task and immediate actions.
29 CFR 1926.35
Competent person responsibilities specific to this task — monitoring, inspection, and authority.
29 CFR 1926.32(f)
Signature pages for supervisor certification and worker acknowledgment of the JHA review.
OSHA Pub. 3071
A JHA is task-specific — not project-wide. Your GC expects a separate JHA for each major scope of work your crew performs. Each JHA breaks down that specific task into steps, identifies the hazards at each step, and prescribes controls.
At $29 per JHA, you can prepare one for each task in your scope — giving your GC exactly what they need for pre-mobilization approval.