Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GARLAND.
Sturm, Ruger & Company, Inc. filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, challenging the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s Data Collection Initiative as unlawful. The court concluded that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the complaint, and that the company must pursue its claims through the review process prescribed by the Occupational Safety and Health Act. We agree.
I
We begin with a description of the statutory framework and of prior proceedings involving Sturm Ruger.
A
The Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSH Act) authorizes the Secretary of La *868 bor to promulgate workplace safety and health standards, 29 U.S.C. § 655(b), as well as regulations “necessary or appropriate for the enforcement of [the Act] or for developing information regarding the causes and prevention of occupational accidents and illnesses,” id. § 657(c)(1). It further directs the Secretary to “prescribe regulations requiring employers to maintain accurate records of, and to make periodic reports on, work-related deaths, injuries and illnesses.” Id. § 657(c)(2). And it gives the Secretary enforcement power, authorizing her to issue citations and to assess penalties for violations of the Act and of the standards and regulations promulgated thereunder. Id. §§ 658, 659. The Secretary has delegated the bulk of these statutory responsibilities and authorities to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA).
While the OSH Act charges the Secretary with rulemaking and enforcement, it gives the task of “carrying out adjudicatory functions” to an independent entity, the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (OSHRC or the Commission).
Id.
§ 651(b)(3);
see Martin v. OSHRC,
In 1996, OSHA launched an annual survey called the Data Collection Initiative (DCI). See 62 Fed.Reg. 6434, 6434 (Feb. 11, 1997). Under the DCI, OSHA requires selected employers to report the number of workers they employed and the number of hours their employees worked during a specified period, as well as the number of work-related injuries and illnesses their employees suffered during that period. See, e.g., OSHA Data Collection Form for Occupational Injuries and Illnesses, 2000 (J.A. at 67). From this information, OSHA calculates injury/illness incidence rates, which it uses to identify establishments to target for inspection. See 62 Fed.Reg. at 6435; Secretary of Labor v. Sturm, Ruger & Co., OSHRC Nos. 99-1873 & 99-1874 (ALJ Order Den. Mot. to Suppress, July 5, 2000) [hereinafter July 2000 ALJ Order] (noting that OSHA uses the DCI to target “sites in high-hazard industries with average or above rates of injury and illness”). 2
*869 B
In April 1997, OSHA sent Sturm Ruger a DCI survey, requiring it to provide information regarding its Pine Tree Castings Division, a New Hampshire facility that manufactures steel investment castings. Sturm Ruger complied and returned the completed survey to OSHA. In June 1998, based on information in the survey, two OSHA compliance officers arrived at Pine Tree to inspect the facility.
See
29 U.S.C. § 657(a) (providing that the Secretary may enter, inspect, and investigate workplaces as necessary to “carry out the purposes of [the Act]”)- Sturm Ruger refused to consent to the inspection, prompting OSHA to obtain a search warrant from the United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire.
See Marshall v. Barlow’s, Inc.,
On January 22, 1999, the district court denied the motion to quash and enforced the warrant.
Sturm, Ruger & Co. v. United States,
No. Civ. 98-418-JD,
In August 1999, the First Circuit dismissed Sturm Ruger’s appeal for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. Noting that the OSHA inspection had already occurred and that citations could soon issue, the court of appeals held that Sturm Rug-er had to pursue its challenge by contesting the citations through the review process established by the OSH Act. The court noted that this process “would involve initial review by an administrative law judge, discretionary review by the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission, and eventual review by this court.” Id. at 63 (citing 29 U.S.C. §§ 659-61).
The First Circuit reached its conclusion notwithstanding Sturm Ruger’s insistence that its claim “involve[d] a ‘purely legal’ issue consisting of a ‘facial’ challenge” to the DCI. Id. at 64. The court found that Sturm Ruger had “not suggested that its claims cannot be adequately adjudicated in the ... anticipated enforcement proceeding,” id. (internal quotation marks omitted), and that in fact “a successful appeal following exhaustion of administrative remedies” would vindicate its rights, id. at 65. Moreover, the court held that, while the company had “not shown that requiring exhaustion would subject it to irreparable harm,” permitting the district court to hear the claim would interfere with “agency autonomy.” Id. at 64-65.
On September 2, 1999, OSHA issued citations to Sturm Ruger based on its inspection of the Pine Tree facility. In accordance with the OSH Act’s review provisions, the company contested those *870 citations before an ALJ appointed by OSHRC. See 29 U.S.C §§ 659(c), 661(j). At the outset of the proceeding, Sturm Ruger moved to suppress the evidence obtained during the Pine Tree inspection, arguing that no regulation authorized OSHA to collect the survey data that it used to target employers for inspection, and that the use of the data violated the Fourth Amendment. The ALJ denied the motion on the ground that, by responding to the survey, Sturm Ruger had waived the right to challenge its legality. July 2000 ALJ Order at 4.
After the ALJ issued a final decision on the merits, Sturm Ruger petitioned for, and the Commission granted, discretionary review. Sturm Ruger’s petition argued that the citations should be vacated because they were discovered in an inspection based on data collected through an unlawful and unconstitutional survey. Pet. for Discretionary Review ¶ 15,
reprinted in Secretary of Labor v. Sturm, Ruger & Co.,
OSHRC Nos. 99-1873 & 99-1874,
C
On May 9, 2000, two months before the ALJ denied its motion to suppress, Sturm Ruger filed a complaint against the Secretary of Labor and the Assistant Secretary responsible for OSHA in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.
Sturm, Ruger & Co. v. Herman,
In its complaint, Sturm Ruger made the same argument now pending before the Commission: that the DCI was invalid because it required employers to report employment data (the number of employees and the hours they worked) despite the alleged absence of a regulation requiring employers to create and maintain such data. The company rested its argument on a section of the OSH Act that states:
On the basis of the records made and kept pursuant to section 657(c) of this title, employers shall file such reports with the Secretary as he shall prescribe by regulation....
29 U.S.C. § 673(e). Sturm Ruger did not dispute that OSHA had satisfied the requirement of the final clause of the section with 29 C.F.R. § 1904.17, a regulation that requires employers to file reports in response to annual DCI surveys. 3 But it argued that the first clause of the section only permits the agency to compel employers to provide information that is con *871 tained in “records made and kept pursuant to section 657(c).” Section 657(c), in turn, provides:
Each employer shall make, keep and preserve, and make available to the Secretary ..., such records regarding his activities relating to this chapter as the Secretary ... may prescribe by regulation ....
29 U.S.C. § 657(c)(1). Sturm Ruger claimed that, although OSHA had a regulation requiring employers to create and maintain the injury and illness data sought by the DCI survey, 29 C.F.R. § 1904.2, no regulation required them to create and maintain the employment data also demanded by the survey. Thus, the company argued, the DCI’s requirement that employment data be reported was unlawful under the OSH Act, §§ 657(c) & 673(e), and consequently under the APA because it was not “in accordance with law,” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2). 4 Finally, like its pleadings before the Commission, Sturm Rug-er’s complaint also contended that employers “have a privacy interest protected by the Fourth Amendment in the information that the survey form seeks to compel them to produce.” Compl. ¶ 40.
The Secretary of Labor moved to dismiss Sturm Ruger’s complaint on the ground that “the administrative review process established by the OSH Act is the exclusive means by which plaintiff may challenge the DCI’s legality.”
Sturm, Ruger & Co.,
II
On appeal, we review de novo the dismissal of Sturm Ruger’s complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, and must accept the factual allegations in the complaint as true.
See Sloan v. United States Dep’t of Hous. and Urban Dev.,
A
In
Thunder Basin,
the Supreme Court considered a pre-enforcement challenge filed by a mine operator against the Secretary of Labor. The operator’s employees had selected two employees of the United Mine Workers, who were not employees of the mine, to serve as their miners’ representatives under § 813(f) of the Mine Act. Thereafter, the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) of the Department of Labor instructed the operator to post the employees’ designated representatives, as required by the statute and a MSHA regulation. Instead, the operator filed suit in federal district court for an injunction against enforcement of the reg
*872
ulation, contending that designation of nonemployee union representatives violated its rights under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), 29 U.S.C. § 141
et seq.
The operator also argued that requiring it to challenge MSHA’s interpretation of the statute and regulation through the Mine Act’s statutory review process would violate the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, because it would force the operator to choose between violating the Act and incurring penalties, or complying and thereby suffering irreparable harm.
Thunder Basin,
The Court held that the statutory review scheme of the Mine Act deprived the district court of subject matter jurisdiction over the operator’s complaint. It declared that “[i]n cases involving delayed judicial review”' — 'that is, where appeal can be taken to the court of appeals after completion of administrative proceedings — “we shall find that Congress has allocated initial review to an administrative body where such intent is ‘fairly discernible in the statutory scheme.’ ” Id. at 207,
First, the Court noted that the “Act establishes a detailed structure for reviewing violations” of MSHA standards and regulations.
Id.
The Mine Act gives a mine operator thirty days to challenge before the Commission any citation issued by MSHA, after which time an uncontested order becomes “ ‘final’ ” and “ ‘not subject to review by any court or agency.’ ”
Id.
(quoting 30 U.S.C. § 815(a), (d)). Challenges filed within the thirty-day period “are heard before an administrative law judge (ALJ), with possible Commission review” to follow.
Id.
at 207-08,
The Court further noted that under the Act, “[m]ine operators may challenge adverse Commission decisions in the appropriate court of appeals, whose jurisdiction ‘shall be exclusive and its judgment and decree shall be final’ except for possible Supreme Court review.”
Id.
(quoting 30 U.S.C. § 816(a)(1)). Courts of appeals must “uphold findings of the Commission that are substantially supported by the record.”
Id.
(citation omitted). In addition, “the statute establishes that the Commission and the courts of appeals have exclusive jurisdiction over challenges to agency enforcement proceedings,” and its “comprehensive review process does not distinguish between pre-enforcement and post-enforcement challenges, but applies to all violations of the Act and its regulations.”
Id.
at 208-09,
In the instant case, the district court concluded, and we agree, that “[t]he administrative and judicial review procedures in the OSH Act are ‘nearly identical’ to those in the Mine Act.”
As under the Mine Act, employers may appeal adverse Commission decisions to the appropriate court of appeals, whose jurisdiction “shall be exclusive and its judgment and decree shall be final,” but which must uphold the Commission’s findings of fact if “supported by substantial evidence.” Id. § 660(a); see supra note 1. And like the Mine Act, the OSH Act does not distinguish between pre- and post-enforcement challenges. Finally, also like the Mine Act, the OSH Act expressly grants district courts jurisdiction over specified actions, see 29 U.S.C. §§ 657(b), 660(c)(2), 662(a) & (d), 666(Z), but those do not include actions brought by employers.
In short, in every relevant respect the statutory review provisions of the OSH Act parallel those of the Mine Act, and we therefore join the First and Sixth circuits in concluding that
Thunder Basin’s
analysis of review under the Mine Act is fully applicable to the OSH Act.
See Manganas Painting Co.,
B
Our conclusion that the OSH Act creates a comprehensive review process comparable to that of the Mine Act’s does not end the inquiry. We must also consider whether Sturm Ruger’s claims “are of the type Congress intended to be reviewed within this statutory structure.”
Thunder Basin,
Like the statutory claims at issue in
Thunder Basin,
Sturm Ruger’s claim that the DCI violates the OSH Act because it is not authorized by regulation is not “wholly collateral” to the OSH Act’s review provisions.
Id.
at 214,
In light of these considerations, we find Sturm Ruger’s invocation of the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Leedom v. Kyne,
As we have just discussed, however, barring district court review in this case will not deprive employers of the opportunity to obtain judicial review. An employer can, for example, refuse to answer the survey, draw a citation from OSHA, and then contest the citation through the statutory review procedure that ultimately ends in a court of appeals.
See Thunder Basin,
Finally, we consider our recent decision in
National Mining Ass’n v. Department of Labor,
First,
National Mining Association
emphasized that the challenge at issue there was a direct attack on the validity of “a formal regulation,” issued pursuant to “notice-and-comment” rulemaking.
National Mining Ass’n,
The same is true here. As we described in Part I.C, Sturm Ruger does not challenge the validity of an OSHA regulation. To the contrary, it insists that there is
no
regulation that authorizes the collection of the employment information demanded by the DCI, and that the survey is therefore
ultra vires. See
Appellant’s Br. at 16, 18, 34.
8
Moreover, as in
Compensation De
*876
partment,
the gravamen of Sturm Ruger’s complaint is that OSHA is employing an unlawful enforcement strategy, in which it “use[s] the information gained through the survey form to target its enforcement activities on employer establishments.” Compl. ¶ 10;
see id.
at ¶¶ 1, 32.
9
As we said in
National Mining Association
regarding
Compensation Department,
there is no reason why Sturm Ruger cannot challenge the Secretary’s enforcement strategy in an individual adjudication before the Commission.
See National Mining Ass’n,
Second, we noted in National Mining Association that the regulations there at issue were “challenged primarily on the ground that they are impermissibly retroactive,” that to determine whether that was true would require analysis of “all of the regulations together as well as the entire rulemaking process,” and that such an analysis “would not be feasible in individual adjudications dealing with particular regulatory provisions.” Id. at 858-59. By contrast, as we have discussed above, there is no reason why Sturm Ruger cannot obtain meaningful review of its challenge through the statutory review process.
Third, and most important,
National Mining Association
was not a case in which the “plaintiff sought to short-circuit the administrative process” through the vehicle of a district court complaint.
Id.
at 858. Sturm Ruger’s complaint, however, fits that description well. As the district court noted, the company “raised the identical claims in its challenge to the citations that is currently pending before the OSHRC.”
*877 III
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court, dismissing the complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, is
Affirmed.
Notes
. A person adversely affected by a Commission order may obtain review in "any United States court of appeals for the circuit in which the violation is alleged to have occurred or where the employer has its principal office, or in the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit." 29 U.S.C. § 660(a).
. When the DCI was first implemented in 1996, OSHA had in effect regulations requiring employers to maintain logs of work-related injuries and illnesses, 29 C.F.R. § 1904.2, and to provide these logs to OSHA upon its request,
id.
§ 1904.7. OSHA did not, however, have a regulation that required employers to respond to the DCI survey. Several employers filed suit against the Secretary, seeking an injunction against its implementation.
See American Trucking Ass’ns, Inc. v. Reich,
. Each employer shall, upon receipt of OSHA's Annual Survey Form, report to OSHA ... the number of workers it employed and the number of hours worked by its employees for periods designated in the Survey Form and such information as OSHA may request from records required to be created and maintained pursuant to 29 C.F.R. Part 1904.
29 C.F.R. § 1904.17.
. Sturm Ruger does not dispute that OSHA has mooted this argument for DCI surveys applicable to years beginning after January 1, 2002. Appellant's Br. at 17 n.1, 29. As the company points out, OSHA has promulgated regulations, effective as of that date, "which now require employers to create and maintain the DCI Survey data" regarding the number of employees and the hours they worked for each establishment. Id. at 17 n. 1 (citing 29 C.F.R § 1904.32 (2002); 66 Fed.Reg. 5916, 6042 (Jan. 19, 2001)).
. Sturm Ruger suggests that this conclusion is "implicitly” inconsistent with our decision in
Workplace Health & Safety Council v. Reich,
. Sturm Ruger also appears to make the opposite argument, contending that OSHA is attempting to shield the DCI from review by choosing not to cite employers who fail to respond. But if that were the case, a point OSHA disputes, employers that fail to answer the survey would suffer no injury.
. In a footnote, Sturm Ruger suggests that it cannot receive meaningful review through the statutory process because the ALJ held that, by voluntarily responding to the survey, the company had waived its right to challenge it.
See
Appellant's Br. at 39 n.ll. But the ALJ's decision does not preclude the Commission, or the court of appeals upon subsequent review, from rejecting the ALJ's decision and accepting Sturm Ruger's contention that the "waiver” was involuntary because its response to the survey was coerced. On the other hand, if both the Commission and court conclude that the company did voluntarily answer the survey, then its injury will have been due to its own voluntary action, and it will lack standing to complain.
See Bennett v. Spear,
.See, e.g., Appellant's Br. at 25 ("Because no OSHA regulation requires maintenance of such data, there can be no requirement to report said information [and] [therefore, the Annual DCI Surveys are an unlawful exercise of authority by OSHA....”); id. at 34 ("[A]t all times relevant to the Complaint, there has been no regulation ... requiring employers to *876 create and maintain the data which OSHA requires employers to report on the DCI concerning number of employees and number of hours worked by employees in establishments.”). In particular, Sturm Ruger does not contend that 29 C.F.R. § 1904.17 unlawfully requires employers to report employment information that OSHA has not separately required the employers to create and maintain. Rather, it contends that § 1904.17 "merely authorizes OSHA to collect such data which OSHA requires employers to maintain by regulation and no such regulation requires this data to be maintained.” Compl. ¶ 36.
. See also Compl. at 13-14 (seeking a declaratory judgment that OSHA's "site specific targeting plans utilizing [DCI] data [are] ultra vires,” and an injunction "enjoinfing] Defendants from conducting inspection programs which... rely upon” DCI data).
.
See Thunder Basin,
