A location where a worker's body part can be caught between moving and stationary objects. Common on heavy equipment, rigging, and rotating machinery at oil and gas and construction sites. Subcontractors must identify and guard pinch points during site hazard assessments.
Pinch Point
Related Terms
Jones Act Waiver
ComplianceA temporary federal exemption allowing foreign-flagged vessels to transport cargo between U.S. ports. Subcontractors may encounter this during emergency offshore operations or disaster response work. Waivers affect vessel availability, crewing rules, and subcontract scope on marine projects.
Environmental Permitting
ComplianceThe process of obtaining government approvals before starting work that may impact land, water, or air. Subcontractors must confirm permits are in place before mobilising — delays can halt work without pay. Missing or expired permits can expose your company to fines and contract termination.
ARO (Asset Retirement Obligations)
ComplianceLegally required costs to decommission and remediate a site at end of life, such as plugging wells or removing infrastructure. Operators budget ARO years in advance, which can create late-project work opportunities for subcontractors. Understand how ARO timelines affect contract scope, since decommissioning work often has strict regulatory deadlines.
29 Cfr 1926 Subpart U
ComplianceThe U.S. federal OSHA standard governing blasting and use of explosives on construction sites. Subcontractors performing demolition, excavation, or site prep must comply when explosives are involved. Non-compliance risks stop-work orders, fines, and contract termination.
Crystalline Silica Rule
ComplianceA regulatory standard requiring subcontractors to limit worker exposure to airborne silica dust on worksites. Common in drilling, sandblasting, and concrete cutting operations. Requires action plans, air monitoring, and respirator programmes for affected crews.
IEEPA (International Emergency Economic Powers Act)
ComplianceA U.S. federal law that grants the president broad authority to regulate or block international trade and financial transactions during a declared national emergency, which can directly affect subcontractors by triggering sudden tariffs on imported equipment and materials, disrupting cross-border project timelines, or restricting payments to and from American clients and primes. Field service companies working on U.S.-linked contracts or sourcing materials from affected countries should monitor IEEPA-related executive orders closely, as cost structures and contract terms can shift with little notice.
Latest Compliance News
Construction Safety Week 2026 Highlights Vacuum Excavator Crush Hazards
As Construction Safety Week 2026 approaches (May 4-8), a fatal vacuum excavator accident in Louisiana puts equipment pinch points and crush hazards in the spotlight for field crews.
2 months ago ComplianceTexas RRC Plugs Six Orphaned Gas Wells in Baffin Bay Coastal Waters
The Texas Railroad Commission has launched a plugging project targeting six leaking orphaned gas wells near Corpus Christi, backed by $100 million in state legislative funding and $3 million from the Texas General Land Office.
2 days ago ComplianceNorth Carolina Ends Penalty Reductions in Fatal Worker Cases
North Carolina has eliminated its "death discount" policy, meaning employers will now face full OSHA penalties when workplace safety violations cause a worker fatality. Learn what this means for subcontractors operating in the state.
3 days ago ComplianceTetra Tech Tapped to Modernize Spillways at Two Columbia River Dams
Tetra Tech has been selected as lead design engineer for a multi-year spillway modernization project at Rock Island Dam and Rocky Reach Dam in Washington state, signaling active hydropower infrastructure work for civil and specialty subcontractors in the Pacific Northwest.
4 days agoRelated Guides
When a Jobsite Incident Happens: What Field Workers Need to Know Before Signing Anything
What to do after a jobsite injury or incident, what your rights are before signing incident reports, how workers' compensation works, and how to protect yourself on multi-employer worksites.
Compliance GuideOSHA Citations on Multi-Employer Worksites: What Subcontractors Need to Know
Learn how OSHA's multi-employer citation policy works, why subcontractors get cited for hazards they didn't create, and how to protect your company on operator-controlled job sites.
Compliance GuideHow to Read and Negotiate an Oilfield Master Service Agreement (MSA): A Subcontractor's Guide
Learn which MSA clauses actually matter for oilfield subcontractors: indemnity, insurance, payment terms, and change orders. Know what you're signing.
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