Accident Prevention Division (APD) seeks review of a Workers’ Compensation Board order vacating a citation and penalty. We reverse and reinstate the citation and penalty.
APD cited defendant, a masonry contractor, for a violation of OAR 437-83-1959, a rule governing the use of scaffolding and ladders on construction sites. The rule requires:
“Guardrails and toeboards shall be installed on all open sides and ends of platforms more than 10 feet above the ground or floor, except needle-beam, ladderjacks and float scaffolds, (see Rules 437-83-2446, 437-83-2496 and 437-83-2536).”
The Board held that APD should instead have cited OAR 437-83-2169, which provides:
“Tubular welded frame scaffolds shall be equipped with guardrails as prescribed in rules 437-83-1959 through 437-83-1976.”
The Board reasoned that APD erred in citing a general rule prescribing standards for all types of platforms, rather than the specific rule prescribing safety standards for tubular welded frame scaffolding, because,
“where the specific standard [OAR 437-83-2169] addressed a specific condition (guardrails as prescribed), then it is not appropriate for the general standard [OAR 437-83-1959] to become applicable, and that is the situation in this case.” (Emphasis in original.)
It vacated the citation and the penalty.
1,2. The rule of statutory construction that a specific rule controls over a general rule applies in a situation where there is a conflict or inconsistency between the two rules. ORS 174.020; Davis v. Wasco Intermediate Education District, 286 Or 261, 593 P2d 1152 (1979). There is no inconsistency or conflict between the two rules. The rule cited by APD, although in a section pertaining to all scaffolding and ladders, contains specific requirements necessary to the implementation of the rule that the Board concluded should have been cited, OAR 437-83-2169. Furthermore, OAR 437-83-2169 incorporates by reference the rule actually cited. Thus, the two rules are complementary rather than contradictory.
*507Given the language of the two rules at issue, citation of either rule would have been adequate to inform defendant of the violation with which he was charged. Accordingly, we hold that the Board erred, in vacating the citation and the penalty.
Reversed and remanded for reinstatement of the citation and penalty.