This establishment reported 2 work-related deaths in its 2024 ITA filing — a fatal-injury rate of about 359 per 100,000 full-time-equivalent workers. For context, the national fatal-injury rate across all industries averaged 3.7 per 100,000 FTE in 2022 (BLS Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries). DART, computed below, counts only non-fatal cases (days away from work or restricted duty); it does not include fatalities.
The DART rate at this establishment is near the industry median.
This establishment: 2.69
Industry median (Horizontal drilling (e.g., underground cable, pipeline, sewer installation), n=261): 2.36
Reported injury and illness, 2024
Fatalities2Days-away-from-work cases4Restricted-duty / transferred cases11Other recordable cases4Total recordable cases21Days lost to injury426
Injury rates (per 100 FTE-year, OSHA standard)
DART rate2.69 (days away + restricted/transferred)DAFW rate0.72 (days away from work only)Total recordable rate (TRIR)3.77 (all OSHA-recordable cases)Annual average employees522Total hours worked1,113,227
What these numbers mean. An OSHA-recordable case is a work-related injury or illness that resulted in death, days away from work, restricted work, transfer to another job, medical treatment beyond first aid, loss of consciousness, or significant injury diagnosed by a physician. DART rate is the OSHA-standard incidence measure — calculate it as (cases with days away + restricted/transferred) × 200,000 / hours worked. The 200,000 hours normalizes to 100 full-time-equivalent workers over a year. National average DART across all industries is around 1.7; high-risk industries (skilled nursing, warehousing, courier) routinely exceed 5.