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Updated April 2026 · OSHA Enforcement Data

Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction in Texas

OSHA workplace safety violations for mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction companies in Texas

OSHA's enforcement file lists 832 citations across 291 mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction companies in Texas, including 832 serious citations and $10.0M in final penalties.

Federal OSHA records for Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction in Texas: 291 employers, 832 inspections, 832 documented violations (832 serious). Total penalty assessment: $10.0M. State-and-industry combination pages help workers identify employers within a specific occupational and geographic context. Texas's Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction sector inspection rate reflects both the local industry size and the regulatory targeting OSHA applies to high-hazard sectors.

Each employer below links to a full inspection history with citation details, penalty amounts, and the LakeQuality safety-score breakdown that benchmarks performance against the industry baseline.

291
Companies
832
Violations
832
Serious
$10.0M
Penalties

Top Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction Companies in Texas

Mining, Quarrying, and Oil and Gas Extraction Hazards in Texas

In the federal enforcement record, mining and oil-and-gas extraction operate under a distinct enforcement framework, with the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) covering most mining work and OSHA covering surface oil-and-gas operations. Confined-space, hot-work, and process-safety standards dominate citations in this sector.

Of the 832 citations in this slice, 832 (100%) are classified as serious — well above the federal average. A high serious-violation share is the clearest signal that the citation count reflects substantive hazard exposure rather than paperwork or recordkeeping issues.

The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) enforces more than 200 specific standards covering everything from fall protection to respiratory exposure. Industry-level injury benchmarks come from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses, which publishes annual incidence rates by NAICS code.

How Texas Enforces Workplace Safety

Texas is a federal OSHA state, meaning inspections are conducted by federal compliance officers from the U.S. Department of Labor. Federal OSHA enforcement priorities — currently emphasizing fall protection, heat illness, and warehouse hazards — apply directly to mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction workplaces in this state.

Total final penalties exceed $10.0M, averaging $34K per cited employer. Penalty exposure at that scale typically requires either a fatality investigation, a serious incident, or a sustained pattern of willful and repeat citations across multiple worksites in the state.

Penalties on this page are final amounts after settlement, not the proposed amounts initially issued in the citation. OSHA regional offices have discretion to settle citations through informal conferences, and many cited employers negotiate substantial reductions in exchange for verifiable abatement plans.

What Workers Should Do

Workers in $mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction workplaces in $Texas retain the full set of federal protections, including the right to a safe workplace, the right to know about hazards, and the right to refuse imminent-danger work without retaliation. Confidential complaints can be filed at osha.gov/workers/file-complaint or by calling 1-800-321-OSHA. The OSHA Workers' Rights page explains the full set of protections under Section 11(c) of the Occupational Safety and Health Act.

Methodology and Data Sources

Counts on this page come from OSHA's public Integrated Management Information System (IMIS) enforcement file, refreshed from the Department of Labor's Enforcement Results Data files. We aggregate citations at the establishment level using the recorded site-state field, then roll those up to the parent company. Industry classification follows the NAICS code recorded by OSHA at the time of inspection.

The Workplace Safety Score shown on linked company pages applies four weighted factors: violation rate versus industry, share of serious-or-willful citations, repeat-citation ratio, and average penalty per inspection. Read the full methodology for the exact formula and edge cases.

OSHA's enforcement file lists 832 citations across 291 mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction companies in Texas, including 832 serious citations and $10.0M in final penalties.