Yellowstone National Park, WY—Federal OSHA workplace-safety record
Yellowstone National Park, WY
6 severe-injury reports between 2016-05-18 and 2025-07-10, 4 OSHA inspections, and 112 Form 300/301 injury filings on federal record in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
Wyoming operates its own OSHA-approved State Plan covering private-sector workplaces, so most enforcement in Yellowstone National Park, WY 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 Yellowstone National Park
Example incidents
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BAUER CONSTRUCTION, INC.
An employee was installing PEX (cross-linked polyethylene) piping material for a propane line connection. He was cutting off excess PEX piping material with a PEX cutter. He noticed an unassociated piece of material was in the way of the PEX cutter. He reached up to move the infringing material, and his arm came down on the blade of the PEX cutter resulting in a severe laceration to his arm.
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U.S. National Parks Service
An employee was fueling a vehicle when they tripped over the fuel hose and fell to the ground. They were hospitalized with a broken nose and three broken ribs.
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Yellowstone National Park
An employee was operating a bulldozer on a road when it slid on ice, then rolled a full 360 down an embankment and came to rest with its tracks wedged in rocks. The employee was found outside of the vehicle with a gash on his head and was hospitalized.
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U.S. Department of Interior
An employee was placing a steel plate onto the back of a flatbed truck when the employee slipped off the bed of the truck and fell approximately 5 feet to the ground, fracturing the left femur.
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U.S. Department of Interior
An employee was up in a tree trying to install a meat-hanging pole. The employee fell to the ground, suffering a fractured arm and spine.
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Garden City Plumbing
An employee was preparing to change piping on a propane tank when liquid propane leaked out and burned the employee, requiring hospitalization.
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Source: federal OSHA Severe Injury Reports, inspections, and ITA Form 300/301 filings. Counts reflect federal jurisdiction only.