Roofing Company Cited for Fall Protection Violations
OSHA cited a Texas roofing contractor $312,000 for willful fall protection violations after workers were exposed to fall hazards of up to 25 feet. Case demonstrates OSHA enforcement priorities in cons

High Impact — This regulatory change has broad implications for employers. Review your compliance posture promptly.
Enforcement Action — This article covers an active enforcement case (OSHA Inspection #1234567). Penalties cited are proposed amounts that may change upon contest or settlement.
Overview
OSHA cited a Texas roofing contractor $312,000 for willful fall protection violations after workers were exposed to fall hazards of up to 25 feet. Case demonstrates OSHA enforcement priorities in construction.
This enforcement action underscores the importance of proactive compliance and self-auditing. Below, we break down what was cited, why it matters, and what employers in similar industries should do now.
What Was Cited
Violations Cited
Based on the enforcement action details:
- OSHA cited a Texas roofing contractor $312,000 for willful fall protection violations after workers were exposed to fall hazards of up to 25 feet
- Case demonstrates OSHA enforcement priorities in construction
Case reference: OSHA Inspection #1234567
Who Is Affected and Where This Applies
This applies to employers operating in Texas (view Texas compliance profile).
Industries affected: construction. Employers in Construction should prioritize their review of this update and assess whether their current programs meet the new requirements.
Compliance Timeline
Compliance Timeline
Citation date
Legislative status
Last verified
Background and Context
The OSHA Regulatory Landscape
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) enforces workplace safety standards under the OSH Act of 1970, protecting approximately 130 million workers at 8 million worksites nationwide. OSHA sets and enforces standards, provides training and outreach, and conducts workplace inspections. For fiscal year 2025, OSHA's maximum penalties were adjusted to $16,550 per serious violation and $165,514 per willful or repeat violation — with annual inflation adjustments continuing to raise these ceilings.
OSHA enforcement priorities shift based on emerging hazards, workplace fatality trends, and National Emphasis Programs (NEPs). In recent years, the agency has intensified its focus on heat illness prevention, fall protection in construction, respirable crystalline silica, and workplace violence in healthcare. Employers in high-hazard industries should monitor NEP announcements closely, as these programs direct OSHA area offices to conduct targeted inspections in specific industries or for specific hazards even without a complaint or fatality trigger.
Why This Matters for Employers
Enforcement actions are one of the clearest signals of regulatory priorities. When OSHA or another agency cites specific violations, assesses penalties, and publicizes the case, it serves as both a deterrent and a roadmap. Employers in similar industries — particularly those with comparable operations, equipment, or processes — should treat this case as a direct prompt to audit their own programs.
The violations cited here point to specific standards that the agency considers high-priority for enforcement. Historically, citations in one region often precede increased inspection activity in the same industry nationwide as area offices share enforcement intelligence and target similar hazards.
Industry focus: This primarily affects employers in the Construction sector. Organizations in this industry should evaluate their current compliance posture and determine if existing programs meet the updated requirements.
For employers reviewing their own practices, the key question is not whether a similar inspection will happen — it's whether your documentation and programs would withstand one. OSHA inspections can be triggered by employee complaints, referrals from other agencies, or programmed inspections under National Emphasis Programs.
Penalties and Enforcement Context
The proposed penalties in this case total $312,000. These amounts represent proposed penalties that may be adjusted through the informal conference process, formal contest before the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (OSHRC), or settlement. Penalties are typically calculated based on the gravity of the hazard, employer size, good faith, and violation history.
$312,000
Cited penalties
$16,550
Max per serious violation
$165,514
Max per willful/repeat
What Employers Should Do Now
Your Compliance Action Plan
Check off each step as you complete it
1. Conduct a gap analysis
2. Audit your documentation
3. Walk your worksites
4. Brief your supervisors
5. Review your injury logs
6. Set calendar reminders
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BlueHive provides OSHA compliance resources nationwide and tracks this topic through our OSHA compliance hub. View the Texas compliance profile for all tracked regulations in this state.
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Compliance Updates
- OSHA Electronic Recordkeeping Requirements — OSHA, Federal (Dec 2024)
- OSHA Temporary Worker Safety Guidance — OSHA, Federal (Dec 2023)
- Capture or Use of Biometric Identifier Act — Privacy, Texas (Dec 2024)
Source: Enforcement Action · Verified 2026-02-03
This article is part of BlueHive Compliance Watch, which monitors occupational health regulations across all 50 states and federal agencies. Browse all state profiles → · View all compliance articles →
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