1,224,460Inspections Most recent open 2026-07-13 Last loaded 2026-07-16
Safety Incidents OSHA Severe Injury Reports · 2015–2025

OSHA Inspection: LIVING AIR, INC.

Federal Agency inspection · Safety discipline

On , OSHA opened a federal Agency safety inspection of LIVING AIR, INC. in 9990 SW 99TH ST, MIAMI, FL 33176 (NAICS 238220). OSHA activity number 347600223.

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Establishment
LIVING AIR, INC.
Site address
9990 SW 99TH ST
City
MIAMI
State
FL
ZIP
33176
Mailing
8865 SW 131ST STREET, MIAMI, FL 33176
Inspection type
Federal Agency (M)
Scope
Partial (B)
Discipline
Safety
Advance notice
No
Union status
B
Opened
Closing conference
Case closed
Last modified
Data loaded
NAICS code
238220
Employees
11
Ownership type
A

7 citations on file for this inspection.

1910.132 D01 I

Serious Gravity 10 1 instance 5 exposed
Issued
Abate by
Penalty
Initial $6452.00 · Current $3972.00 Reduced
29 CFR  1910.132(d)(1)(i): The employer did not select and have each affected employee use, the types of personal protective equipment that would protect the affected employee(s) from the hazards identified in the hazard assessment:  On or about July 5, 2024, at 9990 SW 99th Street, Miami, Florida, employees were exposed to electrical hazards while performing service and maintenance on a 240V HVAC parts such as, but not limited to, a capacitor and  the employer had not conducted an assessment of the potential hazards to determine if personal protective equipment (PPE) was required.
Recent events (2)
  • — I (S) $3972
  • — Z (S) $6452

1910.147 C04 I

Serious Gravity 10 1 instance 5 exposed
Issued
Abate by
Penalty
Initial $6452.00 · Current $3972.00 Reduced
29 CFR  1910.147(c)(4)(i): Procedures were not developed, documented and utilized for the control of potentially hazardous energy when employees were engaged in activities covered by this section:  On or about July 05, 2024, at 9990 SW 99th Street, Miami, Florida, employees were exposed to electrical hazards when the employer did not develop and document lockout procedures to be utilized by employees performing service and maintenance on 240V HVAC systems to control potential hazardous energy such as electrical and pressurized refrigerant.
Recent events (2)
  • — I (S) $3972
  • — Z (S) $6452

1910.333 A02

Serious Gravity 10 1 instance 5 exposed
Issued
Abate by
Penalty
Initial $16131.00 · Current $11451.00 Reduced
29 CFR  1910.333(a)(2): Where exposed live parts were not deenergized, other safety related work practices were not used to protect employees who could be exposed to the electrical hazards involved:  On or about July 5, 2024, at 9990 SW 99th Street, Miami, Florida,  employees were exposed to electrical hazards when performing service and maintenance on energized circuit parts such as, but not limited to, testing and replacing capacitors in 240V HVAC systems and the employer did not ensure that safety related work practices were used.
Recent events (2)
  • — I (S) $11451
  • — Z (S) $16131

1910.335 A01 I

Serious Gravity 10 3 instances 8 exposed
Issued
Abate by
Penalty
Initial $0.00 · Current $0.00
29 CFR  1910.335(a)(1)(i): Employees working in areas where there were potential electrical hazards were not provided with electrical protective equipment that was appropriate for the specific parts of the body that needed to be protected and for the work being performed:  On or about July 05, 2024, at 9990 SW 99th Street, Miami, Florida, employees were exposed to electrical hazards when performing service and maintenance on energized 240V HVAC systems and the employer did provide and require the use of the appropriate insulated gloves.
Recent events (2)
  • — I (S) $0
  • — Z (S) $0

1910.335 A02 I

Serious Gravity 10 3 instances 1 exposed
Issued
Abate by
Penalty
Initial $6452.00 · Current $3972.00 Reduced
29 CFR  1910.335(a)(2)(i): When working near exposed energized conductors or circuit parts, each employee did not use insulated tools or handling equipment when the tools or handling equipment might have made contact with such conductors or parts:  On or about July 05, 2024, at 9990 SW 99th Street, Miami, Florida, employees were exposed to electrical hazards while performing service and maintenance on energized 240V HVAC systems such as but not limited to replacing capacitors and the employer did not ensure insulated tools were used to perform the work.
Recent events (2)
  • — I (S) $3972
  • — Z (S) $6452

1910.1200 E01

Serious Gravity 5 1 instance 5 exposed
Issued
Abate by
Penalty
Initial $3687.00 · Current $2313.00 Reduced
29 CFR  1910.1200(e)(1): Employer had not developed or implemented a written hazard communication program that included the requirements outlined in 29 CFR 1910.1200(e)(1)(i) and (e)(1)(ii):  On or about July 5, 2024, at 9990 SW 99th Street, Miami, Florida, an employee was potentially exposed to hazardous chemicals in the workplace due to the employer not having a Hazard Communication (HAZCOM) Program when using chemicals such as, but not limited to, 410A Refrigerant and Evap Pow'r- C coil cleaner.
Recent events (2)
  • — I (S) $2313
  • — Z (S) $3687

1904.29 B03

Deleted Other-than-serious 1 instance 1 exposed
Issued
Abate by
Penalty
Initial $922.00 · Current $0.00 Reduced
29 CFR 1904.29(b)(3): Each recordable injury or illness was not entered on the OSHA 300 Log and on an incident report (OSHA Form 301or equivalent) within seven (7) calendar days of receiving information that a recordable injury or illness had occurred:  On or about July 12, 2024, at 9990 SW 99th Street, Miami, Florida, the employer did not record on the injury and illness logs the fatality of an employee that was associated to a work-related injury.
Recent events (2)
  • — I (O) $0
  • — Z (O) $922

This record is reproduced from the U.S. Department of Labor Open Data API (OSHA inspection dataset). The original IMIS detail view is available at OSHA's Establishment Search for activity number 347600223.