US Cloud Compliance Platform SwiftComply Acquires ComplianceGo to Enhance Stormwater Field Inspection Tools
2026-06-26 11:05
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en.Wedoany.com Reported - SwiftComply, a cloud compliance management platform headquartered in Pleasanton, California, recently announced the acquisition of ComplianceGo, adding field inspection tools for commercial stormwater programs to its municipal compliance suite.

Mick O'Dwyer, founder and CEO of SwiftComply, told Stormwater Solutions that integrating ComplianceGo will enable municipalities and the contractors they regulate to work from the same set of stormwater compliance data. The acquisition follows SwiftComply's purchase of CloudCompli in 2025, expanding the combined company's customer base to over 700 clients across North America.

O'Dwyer explained that CloudCompli was built around municipal MS4 and permitting, while ComplianceGo brings more robust field inspection tools to the commercial side of stormwater programs. Combined, contractors and the municipalities that regulate them can extract information from a single set of records per site, rather than maintaining separate data, aiming to reduce isolated, low-quality data from disconnected systems. On the technical front, the integration is in early planning stages; the platform already has full lifecycle capabilities serving both municipal and field inspection needs, with the core concept being "one site, one set of records." No immediate changes will be made to existing customers, and the technical team is studying specific processes to connect these systems.

In terms of customer coverage, SwiftComply currently has approximately 700 to 750 clients, of which about 300 are stormwater customers, with an additional 150 MS4 projects. Through this acquisition, the company now covers all 50 U.S. states and serves the Canadian market. Regarding PFAS source control, the company has an industrial pretreatment module; when an industrial discharge source connects to or impacts a stormwater outfall, the two programs can be linked across modules within the same platform. Existing compliance programs cover areas such as Fats, Oils, and Grease (FOG) from food service establishments, backflow, industrial pretreatment, stormwater, and dental amalgam compliance.

O'Dwyer stated that the platform was built based on his background as a wastewater engineer. He initially served as a FOG program manager, then gradually expanded the product to backflow, industrial pretreatment, and stormwater, having also participated in stormwater inspections as an engineer in his early years. In terms of technological development, he believes the pace at which municipalities adopt new technology is changing, and advancements in AI will drive the next phase of system automation, intelligence, and quality improvement. The company has launched its first set of automated form tools for drafting and guiding inspections, marking stormwater discharge points, creating corrective actions, and pre-filling annual reports, while retaining manual approval steps. He noted that MS4 programs do not need more data, but rather systems that provide guidance on next steps, with the core philosophy being to operate on both sides of the permit to deliver better compliance and environmental outcomes for everyone.

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