KEY TAKEAWAYS
A subcontractor refinery injury Texas worker suffers may give rise to several overlapping claims — workers’ compensation through the staffing company, a third party refinery contractor claim against the operator or general contractor, and product liability against equipment makers. Talking with a Pasadena oil refinery injury lawyer or Pasadena plant explosion attorney early is often critical, because each path has its own deadlines and proof requirements.
Refineries do not run on full-time, in-house labor alone. They lean heavily on a layered network of contractors and subcontractors — boilermakers, riggers, painters, instrument technicians, scaffold builders, fire-watch personnel, and more — many of whom are technically employed by smaller outside firms.
When a subcontractor employee is hurt in an explosion, fire, or chemical release, the legal question is rarely simple. Texas allows several different claims to move forward at the same time, and which ones apply depends on the contract structure, who controlled the work, and what caused the injury. That’s why the experienced plant and refinery accident attorneys at SJ Injury Attorneys frequently represent subcontractor employees hurt in plants across the Houston Ship Channel and Texas Gulf Coast.
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Does Workers’ Compensation Cover a Subcontractor Employee at a Refinery?
Most subcontracting firms carry Texas workers’ compensation coverage. If yours does, your medical care and a portion of lost wages will normally be paid through that policy regardless of who caused the explosion. Workers’ compensation is a “no-fault” system, but it is also limited — it does not cover pain and suffering, and it caps wage replacement well below actual earnings.
Some Texas employers are non-subscribers, meaning they have opted out of the workers’ compensation system. In that situation, the rules change dramatically. Non-subscriber cases often allow broader recovery — but require proof of the employer’s negligence, which is why seeking out the right attorney can be monumentally helpful in such cases.
Can a Subcontractor Employee Sue the Refinery Operator?
Yes — under the right circumstances. The refinery operator usually qualifies as a “third party” in relation to the subcontractor employee, which means a separate negligence lawsuit can move forward in addition to the workers’ compensation claim. To win that lawsuit, the injured worker generally must show that the operator:
- Retained control over the work that led to the injury
- Knew of (or should have known of) a hazardous condition on its property
- Failed to take reasonable steps to address it
Texas premises liability law and the operator’s duties under federal Process Safety Management standards both factor in.
Can a Subcontractor Worker Sue the General Contractor or Other Trades?
Often, yes. Refinery jobs are usually managed by a general contractor that coordinates the work of several sub-trades. If the general contractor failed to enforce safety protocols, allowed conflicting work in the same area, or staged equipment in unsafe locations, that conduct can support a third party refinery contractor claim. The same is true of sister contractors performing other trades — for example, a welding crew whose hot work ignited fumes left behind by a separate cleaning team.
When Is the Equipment Manufacturer Liable?
Subcontractor injuries often trace back to a piece of equipment that failed — a relief valve that did not open at its set point, a pump seal that ruptured, a sight glass that cracked, or a sensor that did not alert the control room. When the failure was caused by a defective design, manufacturing flaw, or inadequate warning, the manufacturer can be sued under Texas product liability law.
What About OSHA Violations?
OSHA citations do not automatically create civil liability, but they are powerful evidence. The Process Safety Management (PSM) standard at 29 CFR 1910.119 imposes detailed duties on the operator of a refinery, and citations are publicly searchable through the U.S. Department of Labor. Our team regularly cross-references citation history when investigating these cases.
What Damages Are Recoverable in a Subcontractor Refinery Claim?
The combination of claims usually allows broader recovery than workers’ compensation alone. Through a third-party negligence or product liability case, an injured worker can pursue damages for:
- Past and future medical expenses
- Lost earning capacity
- Physical impairment
- Disfigurement
- Pain and suffering
- Mental anguish
Surviving family members may also have wrongful death and survival actions.
Why Speaking With an Attorney Early Matters
Subcontractor cases are usually a race against several deadlines. The Texas statute of limitations for personal injury is generally two years, but workers’ compensation reporting deadlines are far shorter. Refinery sites change quickly: equipment is replaced, scaffolding comes down, and electronic data is overwritten. Speaking with a Pasadena plant explosion attorney shortly after the incident allows for evidence preservation, timely OSHA records requests, and an honest evaluation of every potentially responsible party.