Texas Chemical Spill Cleanup Sparks Millions In Federal Fines
Three employers face over $3.5 million in proposed penalties after sending workers into a Houston-area sulfuric acid spill without proper protection.
- By Jesse Jacobs
- Jun 29, 2026
Federal safety regulators are seeking millions of dollars in penalties from three companies accused of failing to protect workers during a massive chemical spill response near Houston.
The U.S. Department of Labor announced the enforcement action following an investigation into an incident at a local industrial facility. According to federal inspectors, a supply line ruptured and released 1 million gallons of sulfuric acid after fresh and spent chemicals were improperly mixed, causing a tank to overpressurize. The resulting spill caused multiple employee injuries.
Following the initial emergency, the facility operator hired a cleanup contractor, which subsequently brought in a subcontractor to provide remediation laborers. Investigators allege all three employers willfully bypassed federal safety requirements during the post-emergency response cleanup, despite being fully aware of the severe chemical hazards on site.
The bulk of the proposed penalties target the subcontractor, One Way Environmental Services LLC. OSHA cited the company for 18 willful egregious and five serious violations, carrying $3,045,452 in proposed fines. Investigators stated the company sent laborers into the hazardous spill zone without adequate training, respirator fit tests or necessary safety measures.
The primary cleanup contractor, Coastal Environmental Solutions Inc., faces $392,501 in proposed penalties for two willful and five serious violations. Regulators noted deficiencies regarding respirator use, alongside a lack of required safety programs, emergency response plans and hazardous waste training.
The facility operator, BWC Terminals LLC, was cited for six serious violations. OSHA proposed $82,750 in penalties against the company for exposing workers to chemical burns and failing to provide proper hazardous materials training.
Combined, the proposed penalties against the three entities total $3,520,703.
The employers have 15 business days from receiving the citations to either comply, request an informal conference with the agency's area director, or contest the findings before the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission.
About the Author
Jesse Jacobs is assistant editor of OHSOnline.com.