Florida-based OSHA compliance video intelligence

Active OSHA compliance from ordinary construction cameras.

OSHA Compliance AI converts passive site video into measurable safety evidence: object tracks, 3D spatial relations, rule-based OSHA findings, and audit-ready reports for management and compliance teams.

"You spend thousands of dollars on video surveillance systems that do not protect you from $160,000 OSHA fines. Why? Because no one watches this video."
25
implemented detection rules in the current JSON catalog
3D
camera-space 3D projections with client-facing imperial units
OSHA
rule mapping, severity, measurements, and evidence images

OSHA Compliance AI is an independent compliance-support product and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the U.S. Department of Labor or the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.

Construction site monitored by OSHA Compliance AI
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Hero image placeholder: construction site with AI safety overlay.
AI-assisted construction-site monitoring, spatial measurement, and OSHA-oriented evidence generation.

How The System Works

The current pipeline uses camera data, segmentation, tracking, depth estimation, and OSHA-oriented rules to turn a video segment into spatial findings. The goal is not just to detect objects, but to measure relationships between them in real units and present them in the units the client expects.

1. Camera input

Existing video feeds

The system processes site camera footage and per-frame metadata. It can work with minimal calibration, then improves scale and projection quality when camera intrinsics, extrinsics, or known scene measurements are available.

2. Neural perception

Objects and masks

Neural models identify workers, PPE, equipment, ladders, barriers, zones, suspended loads, edges, and other safety objects. Tracks connect detections over time so duration, dwell time, and movement are measurable.

3. 3D reconstruction

Measured 3D space

Masks are projected into camera-space and normal-aligned 3D views. The engine estimates distances, heights, boundaries, mutual positions, trajectories, speeds, and time-to-collision. Client-facing U.S. reports use feet, inches, mph, and OSHA-friendly thresholds.

4. OSHA rules

Evidence output

Declarative JSON rules classify findings as compliant, non-compliant, not applicable, or insufficient evidence, then generate explanations, measurements, projection references, and evidence cards.

Project pre-assessment

Let us evaluate what can be detected on your site.

Send a sample video from one of your cameras, from 10 minutes to 24 hours long. We will review the footage and prepare a short assessment of which violation types can be detected reliably, which require zone setup, and what additional camera angles or labels would improve coverage.

10 min
minimum sample
24 hr
first review max
1-3 days
typical response
Safety manager reviewing secure OSHA Compliance AI portal

How to submit

Use the secure upload link below or request a private transfer channel. Include the camera location, approximate work area, and any known site rules such as PPE policy, exclusion zones, traffic routes, or fall-protection zones.

Files upload directly to private S3 storage through a short-lived presigned URL; large videos do not pass through the website server.

Client deliverable

Daily OSHA Compliance Report

The client receives a daily report with the most important violations, estimated penalty exposure, marked evidence moments, and concrete recommendations for every controlled rule family. This gives the safety officer detailed control over the jobsite at a scale that manual camera review cannot reach.

Why it matters
100x+

More reviewable safety moments than a human can reliably catch while also walking the site, answering calls, and documenting corrections.

Sample daily report

Harbor Point Mixed-Use Site

Example report for May 13, 2026. 11 cameras processed, 18 hours of footage reviewed, 214 annotated video moments generated.

Private compliance review
Evidence remains between the client and OSHA Compliance AI. The goal is to correct hazards before inspections, claims, or incidents make them expensive.
Total findings
67
19 critical, 31 serious, 17 warning
Potential exposure
$412,850
Illustrative maximum penalty estimate
Evidence moments
214
Clips, frames, projections, and measurements
Correction priority
High
Immediate lift-zone and fall-risk controls

Executive summary

The report separates one-off visual events from repeated patterns, so the client knows what to fix first and what to monitor after corrective action.

Risk index
84/100
Lifting and suspended-load exposure92%
Fall protection and PPE evidence gaps78%
Vehicle route and exclusion-zone discipline71%
Most repeated

Workers outside defined walkways in active equipment areas.

Most expensive

Suspended-load and fall-protection exposures with critical severity.

Fastest correction

PPE policy refresh, barricades, and lift-zone spotter enforcement.

Visual indicators

Daily indicators make the report readable in two minutes, while evidence links keep the details one click away.

Severity mix
Seven-day trend

Top findings with evidence and action plan

Each row links the violation to video evidence, OSHA context, estimated exposure, and the recommended correction.

Penalty figures are planning estimates, not legal determinations.
Finding Evidence Estimate Recommended correction
Suspended-load and lifting-zone exposure
9 events, 3 cameras, critical severity
Open marked clip
Includes projection, worker path, and load zone.
$149,000-$330,000 Stop lift operations when workers enter the load path, enforce exclusion zones, and require a visible spotter for active picks.
Fall-risk work without visible harness/lanyard
6 events, critical severity
Open evidence card
Annotated worker, fall zone, and projection view.
Up to $99,300 Verify fall-protection plan, document anchor/lanyard use, and add camera-visible edge-zone controls before work resumes.
Caught-between worker, equipment, and structure
5 events, critical severity
Open marked clip
Shows equipment movement and pinch corridor.
Up to $82,750 Add physical barricades, define no-go corridors, and update operator/ground-worker communication protocol.
Walkway and vehicle-area zone violations
24 events, repeated pattern
Open marked clip
Shows walkway departure and missing separation.
$16,550 per cited item Repaint/mark walkways, add barrier separation near equipment, and brief subcontractors before shift start.

Daily package

Executive summary

Critical issues, repeated patterns, and trend change since yesterday.

Incident log

Rule ID, severity, time range, camera, object IDs, and measurements.

Evidence links

Annotated clips, frames, projection views, and downloadable evidence cards.

Correction tracker

Recommended action, owner, priority, and follow-up status.

Recommendations by controlled area

Lifting and struck-by controls: enforce exclusion zones, require spotters, verify barrier placement, and review trajectory conflicts.

Fall protection: validate harness/lanyard visibility, guardrail condition, open-edge zones, and hoist-area protection.

PPE and pedestrian routes: confirm hard hats, high-visibility PPE, walkway discipline, and equipment-area separation.

Program management: track recurrence, measure closure rate, and use camera evidence to verify that corrective actions stayed fixed.

Operations, Security, And Camera Scale

OSHA Compliance AI is designed to review site footage continuously, without fatigue and without the attention drift that makes manual camera monitoring unreliable.

Secure processing

Video is processed on protected models inside our controlled environment. It is not published to the internet and is not sent to regulators. The purpose is private risk reduction before a fine, claim, or inspection.

How to provide video

Clients can provide access to live streams, transfer files physically, or enable automatic upload through our integration for near-real-time reports and 24/7 monitoring.

Hundreds of cameras

The system can review footage from many cameras in parallel. It does not get tired, skip quiet hours, or miss repeated low-frequency risks because nobody was watching that screen.

Single scene now, synchronized scenes next

Today, one video stream is treated as one camera scene for detection, tracking, and 3D measurement. Synchronizing several cameras is a realistic extension, not a blocker: overlapping cameras can be aligned by timestamps and calibration points, while non-overlapping cameras need cross-camera identity matching and site-map logic. The hardest part is reliable worker/equipment re-identification across blind spots, but the architecture can add it as a multi-camera layer above the current per-camera scene analysis.

Florida-based, built for Florida and Texas jobsite realities

We are a Florida-based company with an initial compliance focus on Florida and Texas contractors: federal OSHA coverage, fast-moving construction sites, heat exposure, traffic control, fall protection, PPE, and multi-subcontractor work zones. The product is not limited to those states; the rule catalog and reporting model can support U.S. contractors wherever federal OSHA or state-plan equivalents apply.

Detection Coverage: 25 Rule Catalog

These rules are a strong first compliance package for construction video. A full production program can add more site-specific checks by equipment type, zone policy, PPE policy, subcontractor workflow, environmental risk, and client SOP.

Current coverage
25 rules
expandable to broader client-specific compliance programs

Core families

Struck-by, caught-between, zone control, PPE, PPE fit, fall protection, scaffolds, ladders, site access, and heat/rest/shade monitoring.

Current engine contract

Rules consume tracked 2D SAM objects, normal-aligned 3D masks, object tracks, camera reprojection, ground/top projections, and configured zones where needed.

Compliance caution

The software produces compliance evidence and risk signals. Final legal classification remains the employer's and counsel's responsibility.

How many rules are enough?

There is no universal magic number. The current 25 cover the highest-value visual risks: struck-by, caught-between, PPE, fall protection, ladders, scaffolds, zones, site access, and heat/rest/shade. For a broad contractor rollout, a practical next target is 75-100 rules; for complex industrial or infrastructure sites, 120-150 rules is reasonable once site-specific zones, equipment classes, permit workflows, housekeeping, fire prevention, confined spaces, electrical clearances, and client SOPs are encoded. The advantage of the JSON rule catalog is that new checks can be configured without redesigning the whole pipeline.

# Rule ID Detected violation / risk Family Severity Deployment prequalification OSHA basis Key threshold

OSHA And Florida Penalty Context

Florida does not operate a private-sector OSHA state plan, so private construction employers in Florida are generally covered by federal OSHA enforcement. Penalty amounts below follow OSHA's current published penalty table and should be rechecked before commercial use because OSHA adjusts maximum penalties periodically.

Maximum federal OSHA penalties

Current OSHA page lists maximums of $16,550 for serious, other-than-serious, and posting-requirement violations; $16,550 per day for failure to abate; and $165,514 for willful or repeated violations.

Use Cases And Evidence

These examples show the practical output: marked incident moments, evidence cards, source frames, and geometry diagnostics. Click any image or GIF to enlarge it and inspect the details.

Learn about problems on your site before they become real fines, claims, or inspection findings. Most of this can be prevented by reviewing video you already have.

Contact us

Tell us about your site, number of cameras, and the safety issues you want to catch first. We can start with sample-file review, live streams, or an automated upload integration for ongoing 24/7 monitoring.