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Compliance Glossary Term

Venting

The controlled release of gases from pipelines, vessels, or equipment during maintenance, commissioning, or decommissioning work. Subcontractors must follow site-specific venting procedures to remain compliant with environmental and safety regulations. Improper venting can result in work stoppages, fines, or removal from site.

Related Terms

29 Cfr 1926 Subpart U

Compliance

The 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.

Chain-Of-Custody

Compliance

A documented record tracking who handled materials, samples, or equipment at every stage of a job. Subcontractors must maintain this trail to prove proper handling and avoid liability disputes. It is commonly required for soil samples, hazardous materials, and serialised equipment.

NDT (Non-destructive Testing)

Compliance

Inspection methods used to evaluate welds, pipelines, and structures without damaging them. Common NDT techniques include ultrasonic, radiographic, and magnetic particle testing. Subcontractors often need certified NDT technicians on crew to meet client and regulatory requirements.

Jones Act Waiver

Compliance

A 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.

Compliance Theatre

Compliance

When a prime contractor or client demands excessive paperwork and box-ticking that looks rigorous but adds no real safety value. Subcontractors absorb the administrative burden without reduced liability or improved site outcomes. Recognising it helps crews push back on busy-work that pulls focus from genuine hazard control.

JHA (Job Hazard Analysis)

Compliance

A written document identifying hazards and controls for a specific task before work begins. Subcontractors are typically required to complete and submit JHAs to the prime contractor or site owner. Failure to have a compliant JHA on site can result in work stoppages or disqualification from bidding.

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