Updated April 2026 · OSHA Enforcement Data
Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services in Washington
OSHA workplace safety violations for professional, scientific, and technical services companies in Washington
OSHA's enforcement file lists 0 citations across 4 professional, scientific, and technical services companies in Washington, including 0 serious citations and $0 in final penalties.
Federal OSHA records for Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services in Washington: 4 employers, 0 inspections, 0 documented violations (0 serious). Total penalty assessment: $0. State-and-industry combination pages help workers identify employers within a specific occupational and geographic context. Washington's Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services 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.
Top Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services Companies in Washington
Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services Hazards in Washington
In the federal enforcement record, the hazard profile for professional, scientific, and technical services reflects the specific work being performed, with citations clustering in standards that match the everyday operational risks of the sector.
Of the 0 citations in this slice, none have been classified as serious in the underlying federal record. That is the strongest single signal in OSHA enforcement data — serious classifications are reserved for hazards with a substantial probability of death or serious physical harm.
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 Washington Enforces Workplace Safety
Washington operates an OSHA-approved state plan, which means workplace inspections in this state are conducted by Washington state inspectors rather than federal OSHA officers. State plans must be at least as effective as federal OSHA, but enforcement priorities, citation rates, and penalty structures often diverge from the federal baseline. State plan states typically run more inspections per capita and cite a wider range of standards.
Total final penalties across these companies sum to $0 — a modest cumulative figure that suggests citations have largely been settled through informal conferences and abatement plans rather than contested or paid in full. Penalty negotiation is routine in OSHA enforcement.
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 $professional, scientific, and technical services workplaces in $Washington 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 0 citations across 4 professional, scientific, and technical services companies in Washington, including 0 serious citations and $0 in final penalties.