Silica Dust 101: Why Spring Renovation and Demo Projects in DFW Need Silica Testing

If you’re a Dallas-Fort Worth contractor, property manager, or homeowner planning renovation or demolition work this spring, there’s a hazard on your jobsite that doesn’t smell, doesn’t look dangerous, and won’t show up on any standard inspection — until someone is diagnosed with silicosis or your jobsite gets cited by OSHA. That hazard is respirable crystalline silica dust, and it’s generated any time you cut, grind, drill, sand, chip, or demolish concrete, masonry, tile, brick, mortar, stone countertops, or even certain types of drywall.

This post covers what silica is, why it matters in DFW renovation and demolition work, what the OSHA rule actually requires, and how professional silica testing fits into a properly managed project.

What Respirable Crystalline Silica Actually Is

Silica is the most common mineral on earth — it’s the main component of sand, and it’s bound into almost every hard building material used in DFW construction. The hazard isn’t silica itself; the hazard is the dust particles produced when those materials are mechanically disturbed.

“Respirable” silica refers to particles small enough to bypass your body’s natural defenses and lodge deep in the lung tissue. They are roughly 100 times smaller than a grain of beach sand. A dust mask from a hardware store does not stop them. Once embedded, they trigger permanent scarring of lung tissue (silicosis), increase lung cancer risk, and are linked to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and kidney disease.

Silicosis is incurable. The only management is to stop the exposure — which is why the rule is built around prevention rather than treatment.

The DFW Materials That Generate Silica Dust

If your spring or summer project involves any of the following, silica dust is on the table:

  • Concrete — slab cutting, core drilling, breaking up driveways, removing concrete pool decks, demolition of concrete walls
  • Brick and mortar — tuckpointing in historic Fort Worth and Dallas properties, brick veneer removal, chimney work
  • Tile — porcelain and ceramic tile removal in bathroom and kitchen remodels
  • Stone countertops — quartz, granite, and engineered stone fabrication and cutting (engineered stone is particularly high-silica)
  • Stucco and EIFS — common on DFW commercial and residential exteriors
  • Drywall joint compound — some formulations contain silica, especially older products
  • Asphalt and roofing — cutting or grinding
  • Foundation work — drilling piers, breaking out failed slab sections (common in DFW given our expansive clay soils)

Almost every demolition or renovation project in the metroplex touches at least one of these materials. That’s why controlled demolition work needs a silica plan, not just dust sheeting.

What OSHA’s Silica Rule Actually Requires

OSHA’s silica standard for construction (29 CFR 1926.1153) has been fully enforced since 2017 and applies to nearly every renovation, demolition, and finish trade in DFW. The core requirements:

  • A Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) of 50 micrograms of respirable crystalline silica per cubic meter of air, averaged over an 8-hour shift.
  • An Action Level of 25 µg/m³ — the threshold that triggers exposure monitoring and medical surveillance obligations.
  • A written exposure control plan identifying tasks involving silica, the engineering controls used, and the housekeeping measures in place.
  • Either compliance with Table 1 (a list of specified tasks with prescribed dust control methods) or objective exposure data from monitoring to demonstrate compliance.
  • A designated competent person who can identify hazards and has the authority to correct them on-site.
  • Medical exams for any worker required to wear a respirator for silica exposure 30 or more days per year.
  • Recordkeeping of air monitoring, medical surveillance, and objective data.

The rule applies whether you’re a general contractor with 50 employees or a two-person tile crew. There is no small-business exemption.

Where Silica Testing Fits

Silica testing — formally, personal air monitoring for respirable crystalline silica — answers the question OSHA expects you to be able to answer: what is the actual exposure level on this jobsite, for this task, using these controls?

You have two paths under the rule:

Path 1: Follow Table 1 exactly. If your task is on Table 1 and you use the exact engineering controls listed (specific water suppression, specific HEPA-equipped vacuums on tools, specific respirator types for the listed durations), you’re compliant without doing your own air monitoring. The catch is that the controls must be implemented exactly as written.

Path 2: Use objective data or perform exposure monitoring. If your work doesn’t fit Table 1 cleanly — or if you want flexibility in how controls are deployed — you need air monitoring data showing your workers are below the PEL. This is where silica testing becomes essential. Sampling typically involves pumps worn by workers in the breathing zone for representative shifts, with samples sent to an AIHA-accredited lab.

For most DFW renovation and demolition projects with non-standard scope — cutting concrete in a basement, demolishing a tiled commercial space, or doing structural masonry work — Path 2 monitoring is the path that actually documents compliance.

The Cost of Skipping Silica Compliance

Three categories of risk apply:

OSHA penalties. Serious silica violations run into the tens of thousands per citation. Willful or repeat violations can hit six figures. OSHA has prioritized silica enforcement in construction, and inspectors visiting DFW jobsites in 2025 and 2026 have been actively asking about silica plans on demo and renovation projects.

Worker injury liability. A silicosis diagnosis traces back to specific jobsites and specific employers. Texas workers’ comp does not insulate a contractor from negligence claims tied to undocumented silica exposure.

Project delays. An OSHA stop-work order on a Plano or Frisco commercial renovation is enormously expensive. So is having to retrofit dust controls mid-project after an inspection finds your written plan doesn’t match what’s happening on-site.

Silica Often Travels With Other Hazards

Renovation and demolition work that generates silica dust frequently disturbs other regulated materials at the same time. Cutting into old drywall, pipe insulation, floor tile, or roofing can release asbestos fibers — see our posts on asbestos testing and why DIY asbestos work is a bad idea. Older painted surfaces may release lead dust. Hidden moisture damage exposed during demolition can reveal active mold growth.

For DFW renovation projects on properties built before 1980, pre-work environmental testing that bundles asbestos, lead, and silica sampling is the cleanest way to start a project with a known scope of work and a defensible compliance file.

What Silica Testing Looks Like in Practice

A typical silica monitoring engagement for a DFW project includes:

  • Pre-task assessment — reviewing the scope, materials, tools, and existing controls
  • Personal air sampling — pumps and cyclones worn by representative workers performing the task
  • Area sampling — stationary samples documenting general jobsite air quality
  • Laboratory analysis at an accredited lab using NIOSH 7500 or 7602 methods
  • Written report with results, comparison to OSHA Action Level and PEL, and recommendations on controls and respiratory protection

The report becomes part of your written exposure control plan and your defense against any future inspection or claim.

Get the Sampling Scheduled Before You Cut

If you have a DFW project starting this spring or summer that involves concrete, masonry, tile, stone, or demolition of any older structure, the right time to plan silica monitoring is during the pre-construction phase — not the morning of the first cut. Reach out to Superior Environmental Services for silica testing, exposure plan support, and bundled environmental sampling across the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex.

Lead Paint in Pre-1978 DFW Homes: When You Need Testing (and What Happens If You Skip It)

If your Dallas-Fort Worth home was built before 1978, there is a real chance lead-based paint is still hiding under newer layers on your walls, trim, windows, and doors. A 2024 sale or a weekend remodel won’t make it go away — and the moment you sand, scrape, or demolish that surface, you create lead dust that’s hazardous to your family, your contractors, and anyone else in the home.

This post explains when a DFW homeowner actually needs lead testing, what the federal rules require, and why skipping the inspection before a renovation is one of the most expensive shortcuts you can take.

Why 1978 Is the Magic Number

The U.S. banned lead-based paint for residential use in 1978. Homes built before that year — and we have a lot of them in older Dallas neighborhoods like M Streets, Oak Cliff, Munger Place, and parts of East Dallas, Fort Worth’s Fairmount and Ryan Place, Plano’s original townsite, Arlington’s historic core, Irving’s Heritage District, and almost every postwar Garland or Mesquite home — are presumed to contain lead paint unless tested and proven otherwise.

The older the house, the higher the likelihood and the higher the lead concentration. Homes built before 1960 are the riskiest, but anything pre-1978 should be tested before any disturbance.

When DFW Homeowners Should Get Lead Testing

You should schedule lead testing before you:

  • Repaint, scrape, or sand any painted surface in a pre-1978 home
  • Replace windows, doors, or trim in an older property
  • Renovate a kitchen or bathroom that has original paint or millwork
  • Demolish walls, soffits, or any painted structural element (see our notes on safe demolition practices)
  • Buy or sell an older home — a clean lead report is a legitimate selling point
  • Move children under 6 or a pregnant family member into a pre-1978 house

You should also test if you notice peeling, chipping, chalking, or “alligator” paint anywhere in the home — these are the surfaces actively shedding lead into household dust.

The Federal Rule Most Homeowners Don’t Know About

The EPA’s Renovation, Repair, and Painting (RRP) Rule requires any contractor working on a pre-1978 home to be lead-certified and to follow lead-safe work practices when disturbing more than six square feet of interior painted surface (or 20 square feet exterior). That means your handyman, your window installer, your painter, and your demo crew all need to be properly certified — or they’re working illegally and putting your family at risk.

Getting a lead test done first answers the question cleanly. If the surface tests negative, the RRP rule doesn’t apply and your project moves faster. If it tests positive, you know exactly what containment and lead paint removal work needs to happen — and you can hire the right people the first time.

What the Lead Testing Process Looks Like

A professional lead inspection in the DFW area typically includes:

  • Visual assessment — identifying deteriorated paint and high-friction surfaces (windows, doors, stair treads) most likely to generate lead dust.
  • XRF analysis — a handheld X-ray fluorescence device reads lead content directly through the paint layers, non-destructively, surface by surface.
  • Paint chip or dust wipe sampling — for surfaces XRF can’t read accurately, small samples go to a certified lab.
  • Soil sampling — exterior soil near old painted siding is often a hidden source, especially in homes where the exterior has been scraped or pressure-washed over the years.
  • A written report — documenting each tested surface, the result, and recommendations for any positive findings.

What Happens If You Skip Testing

The shortcuts are expensive in three ways:

Health costs. Lead poisoning in children under 6 causes permanent neurological damage at exposure levels far below what an adult would feel. A renovation that releases lead dust into a family home can cause elevated blood lead levels in weeks. The CDC’s blood lead reference value is 3.5 µg/dL — and pediatricians in Dallas County are required to report cases.

Legal and insurance costs. If you sell a pre-1978 home and fail to disclose known lead hazards, you’re violating federal disclosure law (the Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act). Your homeowners insurance generally does not cover claims tied to lead contamination from improper renovation.

Remediation costs. Cleaning up a home where uncontained sanding has spread lead dust into HVAC ducts, carpet, and soft furnishings is dramatically more expensive than testing and abating a known surface in the first place. We’ve seen DFW jobs go from a $1,500 controlled removal to a $20,000+ whole-home decontamination because the homeowner sanded first and asked questions later.

Lead Often Travels With Other Hazards

Older DFW homes that have lead paint frequently have other environmental concerns layered into the same renovation. Pre-1980 homes may have asbestos in floor tiles, popcorn ceilings, pipe insulation, or drywall joint compound — see our guide on popcorn ceiling asbestos and asbestos in drywall. If you’re already opening up walls, bundling lead testing with asbestos testing saves money and ensures nothing surprises you mid-project.

Get the Test Before You Start the Project

If you’re a DFW homeowner planning a spring or summer renovation on a pre-1978 property — or you’ve just closed on an older home and want to know what you’re working with — schedule a lead inspection before the first hammer swings. Contact Superior Environmental Services for licensed lead testing across the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex. We can usually get a technician to your property within 24 hours.