Updated April 2026 · OSHA Enforcement Data
Other, Workplace Safety Record
4 companies · 8 violations · 8 inspections
OSHA's enforcement file documents 8 citations across 4 other companies, averaging 1.00 violations per inspection with a 63% serious-or-willful citation share.
Other (NAICS 99) — 4 employers in the United States, 8 federal OSHA inspections, 8 documented violations.
Industry-wide statistics: 1.00 violations per inspection on average, with average final penalty of $9,938 per inspection. The largest single employer by violation count is Ocp Contractors. For workers evaluating job offers in this sector, the violation rate is a useful sector-wide signal — but the per-company pages give the specific safety record for individual employers, which is what actually matters for an individual employment decision.
Top Companies by Violations
Other Hazard Profile
OSHA citations in other workplaces reflect the specific work being performed, with citations clustering in standards that match the everyday operational risks of the sector. Fall protection, hazard communication, machine guarding, and lockout/tagout are the four standards most likely to appear regardless of industry.
Other runs a relatively low citation density at 1.00 violations per inspection, indicating that most inspections in this sector close with a small number of citations. Low density usually reflects either lower inherent hazard exposure or a workforce where employer safety programs are mature and well-documented.
The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) publishes the controlling standards, and the Enforcement Results Data files are the primary public source for citation history.
Severity and Penalty Patterns
Serious and willful citations account for 63% of all citations — well above the federal average. A high serious-or-willful share is the clearest signal that citation counts in this sector reflect substantive hazard exposure rather than paperwork or recordkeeping issues.
Final penalties in other average $9,938 per inspection. Final penalty figures reflect amounts after settlement, not the proposed amounts initially issued in the citation. OSHA regional offices have discretion to settle citations through informal conferences in exchange for verifiable abatement plans.
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. Reading citation counts alongside BLS injury rates is the cleanest way to interpret whether the citation pattern reflects underlying hazard exposure or elevated enforcement attention.
What This Means for Workers
Workers in other retain the full set of federal protections under the Occupational Safety and Health Act, including the right to a safe workplace, the right to know about hazards, the right to training in a language they understand, the right to copies of medical records and exposure monitoring results, 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 spells out the full set of protections under Section 11(c) of the OSH 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. 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. Each factor is normalized so that companies in inherently risky sectors are compared against their actual peers rather than against low-hazard work. Read the full methodology for the exact formula and edge cases.
OSHA's enforcement file documents 8 citations across 4 other companies, averaging 1.00 violations per inspection with a 63% serious-or-willful citation share.