Cities

Workplace safety enforcement data for 7,213 cities across the United States

# City State Employers Inspections Violations Total Penalties
5001 Belle vernon PA 9 8 34 $22K
5002 Valders WI 5 15 16 $22K
5003 Shrewsbury NJ 8 8 13 $22K
5004 Hatboro PA 6 8 24 $22K
5005 Cookstown NJ 6 11 55 $22K
5006 Florence SC 82 56 87 $22K
5007 Preble NY 5 19 56 $22K
5008 San lorenzo PR 14 29 41 $22K
5009 Triadelphia WV 9 16 8 $22K
5010 North vernon IN 8 8 8 $22K
5011 Herkimer NY 23 63 148 $22K
5012 Silver springs NV 9 24 49 $22K
5013 Prosser WA 15 31 89 $22K
5014 Davison MI 16 27 49 $22K
5015 Lexington VA 17 40 55 $22K
5016 Northglenn CO 9 12 11 $22K
5017 Blue bell PA 20 15 12 $22K
5018 Garrison NY 5 14 52 $22K
5019 Peyton CO 5 4 8 $22K
5020 Oxon hill MD 7 10 32 $21K
5021 Bellefonte PA 8 14 33 $21K
5022 Ruston LA 22 12 7 $21K
5023 Aibonito PR 19 39 35 $21K
5024 Roscommon MI 5 17 43 $21K
5025 Ovilla TX 5 8 11 $21K
5026 Moorhead MN 9 12 31 $21K
5027 Sand springs OK 15 6 8 $21K
5028 Issaquah WA 16 24 42 $21K
5029 Kings bay GA 12 19 11 $21K
5030 Munising MI 10 17 85 $21K
5031 Keysville VA 5 6 14 $21K
5032 Lansdowne PA 7 3 9 $21K
5033 Bourne MA 5 11 25 $21K
5034 Wauchula FL 24 3 14 $21K
5035 Girard KS 5 6 15 $21K
5036 Youngsville NC 9 14 38 $21K
5037 Brookfield IL 8 11 7 $21K
5038 Riverton UT 29 17 33 $21K
5039 Gardendale AL 8 5 6 $21K
5040 Bedford NH 16 14 12 $21K
5041 Selma NC 9 14 31 $21K
5042 Remus MI 7 20 29 $21K
5043 Dansville NY 7 18 86 $21K
5044 Marshall MN 8 17 33 $21K
5045 Guayama PR 27 56 58 $21K
5046 Alpine UT 7 8 24 $21K
5047 Donaldsonville LA 5 6 4 $21K
5048 Erlanger KY 17 9 2 $21K
5049 Hondo TX 8 4 16 $21K
5050 Los alamos NM 7 13 37 $21K
5051 New hyde park NY 43 24 115 $21K
5052 Rogers city MI 5 13 53 $21K
5053 Hillsdale MI 13 25 78 $21K
5054 Margate FL 5 8 6 $21K
5055 Belmont NH 7 10 25 $21K
5056 Charles city VA 6 11 57 $21K
5057 Southlake TX 20 6 21 $21K
5058 Bishop TX 5 8 5 $21K
5059 Blue earth MN 9 18 46 $21K
5060 Saltillo MS 12 13 14 $21K
5061 Roselle IL 11 10 14 $21K
5062 New ulm MN 9 15 42 $21K
5063 Surprise AZ 25 20 40 $21K
5064 Ironwood MI 13 25 83 $21K
5065 Mountain city TN 14 33 87 $21K
5066 Eloy AZ 10 17 77 $21K
5067 Burlington CO 5 8 32 $21K
5068 North east MD 12 22 95 $21K
5069 Colfax NC 9 12 46 $21K
5070 Bloomfield hills MI 29 29 49 $21K
5071 Oxford MI 14 23 120 $21K
5072 Angola NY 7 15 28 $21K
5073 Barrington IL 24 21 31 $21K
5074 Odessa MO 5 6 24 $21K
5075 Stephenville TX 10 4 7 $21K
5076 Half moon bay CA 14 16 45 $21K
5077 Johnston IA 27 25 54 $20K
5078 Millis MA 5 9 21 $20K
5079 Nyack NY 15 29 63 $20K
5080 Somerton AZ 19 51 52 $20K
5081 Bridgewater MA 8 15 21 $20K
5082 Asheboro NC 26 35 95 $20K
5083 Valley center KS 6 12 11 $20K
5084 Franklin KY 7 9 12 $20K
5085 Southampton NJ 7 14 24 $20K
5086 Canyonville OR 5 13 22 $20K
5087 Atco NJ 6 16 52 $20K
5088 Leesburg VA 32 27 51 $20K
5089 Salida CO 8 8 18 $20K
5090 Stanley NY 5 12 43 $20K
5091 Westbrook CT 5 14 38 $20K
5092 Sidney NY 17 33 102 $20K
5093 Prescott AZ 34 39 117 $20K
5094 Lake village AR 11 4 5 $20K
5095 Milford NH 13 10 8 $20K
5096 Salida CA 8 16 17 $20K
5097 Westhampton beach NY 11 18 32 $20K
5098 Eunice LA 10 6 11 $20K
5099 Lyndonville VT 6 8 27 $20K
5100 East jordan MI 8 15 32 $20K
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Workplace Safety Data, City By City

PlainWorker collects OSHA inspection records, citation history, and current penalty totals for every U.S. city that appears in the federal Integrated Management Information System (IMIS). Cities are populated by employer establishment address — the location where the inspection actually occurred — not the corporate headquarters address. A national restaurant chain whose headquarters sits in one city but whose locations are inspected in hundreds of others will appear in each of those city pages with the specific inspection records that occurred there. This makes city-level views useful for understanding what is happening on the ground rather than where corporate paperwork is filed.

How Each City Page Is Built

For each city, our pages aggregate three layers: (1) the count of unique employer establishments inspected at least once in OSHA's reporting window, (2) the cumulative number of inspections and citations issued at those establishments, and (3) the total current penalty amount assessed across all citations. Current penalty is the amount after employer-agency settlement — not the initial proposed penalty, which is frequently reduced through informal settlement, abatement agreement, or administrative law judge decisions. Where a city's totals look unusually high or low compared to its population, the underlying mix of industries is usually the explanation: construction, manufacturing, and warehousing draw more inspections per worker than office-based sectors.

Federal OSHA vs. State Plans

Roughly 22 states operate their own OSHA-approved State Plans, which means workplace safety in those states is enforced by a state agency rather than by federal OSHA directly. State Plans are required to be at least as strict as the federal program, but they often adopt additional standards, use different penalty schedules, and prioritize different industries. Where a State Plan reports its data through IMIS, those records appear in our city pages alongside federal records; where reporting lags or is incomplete, the city totals should be read as federal-jurisdiction-only for that geography. The methodology page documents which states fall into each bucket and when the data was last refreshed.

Reading A City Page

Each city page lists the largest inspected employers (by penalty, then by inspection count), the most common industry sectors among inspected workplaces, the share of citations classified as serious, willful, or repeat, and a roll-up of the most-cited OSHA standards. The most-cited-standards roll-up is particularly useful for local hazard awareness: if fall-protection citations dominate a city's record, that pattern points to ongoing construction-sector risk; if respiratory-protection or hazard-communication citations dominate, that pattern points to chemical-exposure risk in manufacturing or services. We do not editorialize these patterns on the city page itself — we surface the data and let you draw conclusions — but the methodology page explains how each metric is computed.

Source And Refresh Cadence

City data is derived from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's Enforcement Data, published by the U.S. Department of Labor at osha.gov and mirrored on enforcedata.dol.gov. We refresh on a quarterly cadence; the exact last-refresh date appears at the bottom of each city page. If a record on this page disagrees with the official OSHA establishment search at the same date, the official source is authoritative — please contact us with the record ID and we will investigate.

Why City-Level Views Matter For Workplace Safety

City-level enforcement data is one of the few public lenses that connects national policy with the specific job sites where workers spend their days. A national back-wage settlement, an industry-wide hazard alert, or a federal emphasis program ultimately resolves at a street address — a warehouse on the edge of town, a construction site downtown, a meat-processing plant near the interstate. By aggregating to the city, this directory makes it possible for workers, journalists, researchers, and local officials to see which workplaces in their own community have repeated citation history, which categories of hazard dominate, and how penalties compare to similar cities of similar industry mix. None of that requires editorializing — it requires consistently published, properly normalized public data, which is what each city page provides.

The cities listed in this directory are sorted by the number of inspected employer establishments. That ordering reflects scale, not severity: a large metropolitan area will generally have more inspected workplaces than a smaller one even if the rate of citations per worker is lower. To compare cities on a like-for-like basis, look at the average penalty per inspection on each city page rather than at total penalty figures. To compare to a national baseline, the most-dangerous-industries ranking on the rankings hub provides per-inspection averages by sector. Together those two views allow you to ask the most useful local question — "Is this city's enforcement record explained by its industry mix, or is something else going on?" — and answer it with public data alone.