Park Manor of Tomball: Staffing Posting Failures - TX
The violation, cited as affecting many residents, was recorded during a complaint inspection on November 24, 2025.
What inspectors require is specific and not complicated. Each shift, a supervisor is supposed to sit down within two hours of that shift starting, count the direct care staff on the floor, and fill out a form. The form goes up in a place the administrator has designated, somewhere residents and family members walking the halls can actually read it. It has to show the facility's name, the date, the census at the start of the shift, the type of staff working — registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, licensed vocational nurses, certified nursing assistants — and the actual hours each category worked. Not scheduled hours. Actual hours.
Park Manor of Tomball was not doing this the way it was supposed to be done.
The requirement exists because staffing is not an abstraction in a nursing home. It is the difference between a call light answered in two minutes and one that goes unanswered for forty. It is whether someone gets turned in the night to prevent a pressure wound from forming, or whether they lie in the same position until morning. Families who visit their mothers and fathers in these facilities often have no way of knowing, from the outside, whether the building is adequately staffed on any given day. The posting requirement is one of the few tools they have.
When the forms are not filled out, or not posted where they can be seen, that tool disappears.
The deficiency was classified at a level of potential for minimal harm. That is the lowest tier in the federal harm classification system. It means inspectors did not document a resident who was injured or made worse because of this specific lapse. What it does not mean is that the lapse was inconsequential.
Staffing transparency requirements have been part of federal nursing home oversight for years precisely because facilities have, historically, not volunteered the information. A family member who wants to know whether their loved one's floor had two aides or five on the overnight shift has no practical way to find out unless the form is on the wall. Administrators know this. The requirement puts the information in public view on purpose.
Park Manor of Tomball sits at 250 School Street in Tomball, a suburban community northwest of Houston in Harris County. The November inspection was triggered by a complaint, meaning someone, a resident, a family member, or a staff member, contacted regulators before inspectors arrived.
The facility's plan of correction was not included in the portion of the inspection record available. What the record shows is the deficiency, the date it was cited, and the regulatory language describing what the facility was supposed to be doing and was not.
For the residents living at Park Manor of Tomball, the posted staffing form is not a bureaucratic formality. It is, on the days it is filled out and put where people can see it, the only public answer to a simple question: who is here, right now, taking care of us?
On the day inspectors arrived, that answer was harder to find than it should have been.
Full Inspection Report
The details above represent a summary of key findings. View the complete inspection report for Park Manor of Tomball from 2025-11-24 including all violations, facility responses, and corrective action plans.
Additional Resources
Data source: Official federal inspection data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).
Editorial process: AI-synthesized regulatory data, reviewed for accuracy by our editorial team.
Professional review: All content reviewed by Christopher F. Nesbitt, Sr., NH EMT & BU-trained Paralegal.
Last verified: June 20, 2026 · Our methodology
PARK MANOR OF TOMBALL in TOMBALL, TX was cited for violations during a health inspection on November 24, 2025.
The violation, cited as affecting many residents, was recorded during a complaint inspection on November 24, 2025.
Health inspections identify deficiencies that facilities must correct. Violations range from minor documentation issues to serious safety concerns. Review the full report below for specific details and facility response.