Anchorage, AK—Federal OSHA workplace-safety record
Anchorage, AK
9 severe-injury reports between 2020-05-26 and 2025-10-08, 1,205 OSHA inspections, and 2,333 Form 300/301 injury filings on federal record in Anchorage, Alaska.
Alaska operates its own OSHA-approved State Plan covering private-sector workplaces, so most enforcement in Anchorage, AK is state-run. The federal OSHA records on this page cover only workplaces under federal jurisdiction — they are not a complete picture of workplace safety in the city.
Employers with the most severe injuries in Anchorage
Example incidents
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Turnagain Marine Construction Corporation
An employee was assisting with pre-welding setup on pile structures at the fuel dock worksite. They were working to operate a come-along to align a waler to the pile. Due to limited leverage and restricted positioning within the man basket of the crane, the employee exited the basket to manually adjust the waler from the structure itself. During the task, wave height and frequency increased. A large wave struck the area, causing the pile braces and walers to shift. The employee lost their footing and grabbed the production pile edge. Their fingers on one hand were crushed between two structural steel piles. The employee sustained an amputation to the fingers and was hospitalized.
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Bureau of Land Management
An employee was training and running and suffered rhabdomyolysis.
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Doyon Drilling, Inc.
An employee was slipping pipe when it became stuck and the pipe snapped, striking the employee in the back and ribs. The employee sustained fractured ribs.
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Southcentral Foundation
An employee slipped on snow and ice and fell, suffering injuries to the left knee and hip.
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Matson Navigation Company of Alaska, LLC
On June 25, 2023, an employee was standing on the top rail of a guarded catwalk (3-4 feet) while reaching for a cable to connect to a ship. The employee lost his balance and fell, resulting in a collapsed lung, 3 broken ribs, and a right shoulder injury.
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U.S. Department of Agriculture - U.S. Forest Service
An employee was connecting two hoses together on a fire line when they fell into a hot ash pit and sustained second degree burns to the shoulder, hands, and knee.
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Source: federal OSHA Severe Injury Reports, inspections, and ITA Form 300/301 filings. Counts reflect federal jurisdiction only.