Approval routing
Correcting a life safety failure isn’t a one-person job on paper — it needs sign-off. Approval routing is how Maintenance Ops moves a corrective work order through the right people, records each approval, and adapts to how your team is actually structured.
The approval chain
Section titled “The approval chain”A life safety corrective work order moves through a chain rather than flipping straight to done. The work is performed, then inspected and approved through additional steps that a general work order never sees — statuses like awaiting a manager inspection and awaiting final approval. Each step is a documented checkpoint, so the record shows not just that the work was done, but that it was verified and signed off.
It adapts to your team
Section titled “It adapts to your team”The routing adjusts to the roles that actually exist in your organization. If a manager role is present, the chain includes a manager inspection step before final approval. If there’s no manager, the chain adjusts so that the higher authority provides the sign-off directly — the approval still happens, it just doesn’t wait on a role you don’t have.
This means the system doesn’t force an empty step. It routes to the people who are actually there to approve, while still guaranteeing that life safety corrections get proper sign-off.
Every sign-off is stamped
Section titled “Every sign-off is stamped”At each step, the approval is recorded with who did it and when. That’s the heart of it: when the work is finally approved, you don’t just have a completed work order — you have a documented chain showing the failure was found, corrected, inspected, and approved, each step attributed to a person. Nothing about that chain can be quietly rewritten afterward.
Why this matters
Section titled “Why this matters”This is what separates real compliance from a checkbox. An inspector or insurer isn’t only asking whether the extinguisher works now — they may ask who verified the correction and when. The approval chain answers that question by design, because the sign-offs were captured as the work moved, not reconstructed later.
Preserving the record
Section titled “Preserving the record”Once corrections are approved, the compliance history can be captured in a point-in-time archive — see Compliance packets.