Fayetteville, NC—Federal OSHA workplace-safety record
Fayetteville, NC
7 severe-injury reports between 2015-10-19 and 2024-05-17, 698 OSHA inspections, and 1,797 Form 300/301 injury filings on federal record in Fayetteville, North Carolina.
North Carolina operates its own OSHA-approved State Plan covering private-sector workplaces, so most enforcement in Fayetteville, NC 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 Fayetteville
Example incidents
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Employment Source Inc.
An employee was operating a zero turn mower on top of a slope when the mower began to slide out of control and the employee's left foot got caught between the tree and the mower deck.
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U.S. Postal Service
An employee and co-workers were on the upper level of a machine while observing and listening for loud/worn rollers in the machine. After identifying the noisy bearing, the employee stepped away from the machine and her hand touched the incline belt. The belt pulled her hand into the idler roller, causing it to get wedged between the roller and the incline belt. The belt was stopped and the employee's hand was worked out from the roller. The employee suffered a hand injury, including friction burns, that required hospitalization.
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NG Companies
On July 28, 2021, an NG Companies employee was about to transfer mud to a bore pit. He had put the hydro excavation truck in position for the debris transfer and prepared it. When he opened a knife valve, hot water sprayed through the flange onto him, causing second-degree burns to his face, right arm, and right hand; a third-degree burn to part of the right arm; and a broken collarbone. He was hospitalized.
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Munie Greencare Professionals
A landscaping employee suffered cramps and dehydration due to a heat-related illness.
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Marvin Allan Door Company, Inc.
An employee had just repaired an overhead door chain in an ambulance garage and was climbing down a 12-foot A-frame ladder. His left hand was resting on the chain he just repaired when a paramedic came in and activated the switch to raise the garage door. His hand was caught between the chain and sprocket to the garage motor, amputating both middle fingertips.
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U.S. Dept of Veterans Affairs
An employee's right thumb was caught in a safe door she was closing, crushing/amputating her thumb tip above the nail.
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Source: federal OSHA Severe Injury Reports, inspections, and ITA Form 300/301 filings. Counts reflect federal jurisdiction only.