105,313Records 71,083Employers 85,290Hospitalizations 27,770Amputations 2015-01-01 2025-10-31
Safety Incidents OSHA Severe Injury Reports · 2015–2025

Rocky Mountain Bottle Company LLC

Nonstructural fire, n.e.c. · Heat (thermal) burns, unspecified

An employee was lubricating a forming machine when hot bottles fell off the machine. A bottle contacted the employee's left leg and ignited their flame retardant pants. The employee's left leg was burned from the thigh to just below the knee.

Hospitalized Knee(s) and leg(s) Blouses, shirts, dresses, trousers, skirts

Sodexo, Inc.

An employee was working in the basement when lithium batteries in his pocket caught fire, resulting in burns to his hip and the top of his leg.

Pureline Treatment System LLC

An employee was moving a metal door, creating a spark. The employee's boots caught on fire due to residual flammable chemicals that were on his boots. The employee sustained burns to the ankle/metatarsals of both feet.

Mica Steelworks

An employee was returning from their break when the rags in his back pocket contacted a nearby stove heater. The rags caught on fire and spread to the employee's clothing. He sustained third-degree burns to the left and right buttocks.

EaglePicher Technologies, LLC

An employee was pouring iron powder into a blender. The powder ignited and burned the employee's left hand, as well as a finger on his right hand.

Solar Atmospheres, Inc.

On June 8, 2022, an employee was packing titanium powder into a 55-gallon drum contained in an aluminum dumper. The employee used their hands to grasp the trays and dump them into the drum. The powder dumping process creates a dust plume. The dust plume ignited, possibly due to static charge. A flash fire occurred and the employee suffered burns on the top of both hands.