CMP CORPORATION
2401 PARK CENTRAL BLVD, DECATUR, GA 30035
NAICS 333912: Air and Gas Compressor Manufacturing - Records current through Mar 11, 2026
CMP CORPORATION has had 1 OSHA inspection since Mar 11, 2026 with no violations cited.
As reported in the U.S. Department of Labor OSHA enforcement database. Having inspection records is common for businesses in regulated industries. Penalty amounts may differ from final amounts after settlement or judicial review.
- Based on public enforcement records, the most recent inspection here took place on March 11, 2026.
- This establishment has a clean inspection record with no violations cited across 1 inspection.
- This establishment has 1 open inspection in OSHA's records. Violation and penalty information may be updated as the case progresses.
Data sourced from the U.S. Department of Labor OSHA enforcement database. Penalty amounts shown reflect the latest penalty amounts on record in the DOL database and may differ from initial assessments or final amounts after informal conferences, settlements, or adjudication. Having an inspection record is common in regulated industries and does not by itself indicate unsafe conditions. This is not an official OSHA resource and does not constitute legal advice.
| ID | Opened | Type | Scope | Viol. | Penalties |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #348803909 | Mar 11, 2026 | Complaint | Partial | 0 | $0 |
Understanding OSHA Inspection Records
OSHA inspection records document federal workplace safety enforcement activities. Each record includes information about the inspection type, any violations found, and penalties assessed. These records are public data maintained by the U.S. Department of Labor.
An inspection on record does not mean a workplace is dangerous. OSHA conducts tens of thousands of inspections annually as part of routine enforcement, and many inspections close with no violations cited.
About This Industry
NAICS 333912: Other General Purpose Machinery Manufacturing / Manufacturing
This industry group comprises establishments manufacturing general-purpose machinery such as pumps, compressors, material handling equipment, power tools, welding equipment, and industrial furnaces.
Common workplace hazards include machine guarding deficiencies, caught-in hazards from rotating equipment during assembly and testing, and welding fume exposure. Workers may also face risks from overhead lifting, noise from machining and assembly operations, and electrical hazards during testing.
Lockout/tagout (29 CFR 1910.147) is consistently among the most cited standards in manufacturing because it applies to virtually every piece of powered equipment. Common violations include lack of written energy control procedures for specific machines, failure to train authorized and affected employees, failure to conduct periodic inspections of energy control procedures, and using inadequate lockout devices. The standard's detailed requirements make full compliance challenging for facilities with diverse equipment.
Data Source and Methodology
Data synced dailyData on this page comes from the U.S. Department of Labor's OSHA enforcement database, accessed via the DOL public data API. Records are updated daily. We strive for accuracy, but errors in data processing or establishment grouping are possible. Penalty amounts reflect the latest penalty amounts on record in the DOL database and may differ from initial assessments or final amounts after informal conference, settlement, or judicial review. Company pages group inspection records by normalized employer name, city, and state as reported in OSHA records. That grouping is deterministic and non-fuzzy, but it is not a universal legal-entity identifier. If you believe any record is inaccurate, please report it and we will investigate. This product uses the DOL Data API but is not endorsed or certified by the DOL. For official and authoritative records, visit osha.gov.