Washington, DC —
OSHA Injury Report: Fort Myer Construction
Injury · Job transfer or restriction
At a glance
On , an injury at Fort Myer Construction in Washington, DC 20018 resulted in job transfer or restriction. Employee was skilled labor in highway street and bridge construction industry.
Where did this happen?
- Establishment
- Fort Myer Construction
- Parent company
- Fort Myer Construction
- Street
- 2237 33rd St. NE
- City
- Washington
- State
- DC
- ZIP
- 20018
- On-site location
- 515 D St NW DC.
What was the outcome?
- Outcome
- Job transfer or restriction (code 3)
- Type
- Injury (code 1)
- Days restricted or transferred
- 5
Before the incident
Laborer was cutting multiple pieces of rebar with a saw; emitting sparks which caused the burn to the right leg.
What happened
FMCC skilled laborer [REDACTED] was utilizing a chop saw to cut multiple pieces of rebar. During the operation; the rebar was elevated off the ground; this positioned the sparks from rebar to be aimed towards the leg causing the burns.
Injury or illness
Lower right leg shin area had minor burns.
Object or substance involved
Sparks from rebar being cut by a chop saw causing burns through the pants legs.
Summary line
FMCC skilled laborer [REDACTED] was utilizing a chop saw to cut multiple pieces of rebar. During the operation; the rebar was elevated off the ground; this positioned the sparks from rebar to be aimed towards the leg causing the burns.
Employee and industry
- Job description
- Skilled labor
- SOC code
- 47-2061 — Construction Laborers
- NAICS code
- 237310 — highway street and bridge construction industry
- NAICS vintage
- 2022
- Avg employees
- 703
- Total hours worked
- 1411754
- EIN
- 540956585
- Establishment ID
- 1529544
- Employer case #
- 13
When (timing detail)
- Date of incident
- Shift started
- 8:00
- Time of incident
- 11:20
- Filing year
- 2025
- Submitted
- 02MAR26:17:15:00
Source
Data from OSHA ITA Form 300/301 electronic submissions, filing year 2025. ITA Case Detail records are establishment-reported submissions, not OSHA inspections — no per-record IMIS deep link exists.