Full-Time

Engineer 3 – Sr Engineer

Posted on 11/8/2025

Deadline 11/17/25
Atmos Energy

Atmos Energy

1,001-5,000 employees

Regulated natural gas distribution utility

No salary listed

Dallas, TX, USA

In Person

Category
Mechanical Engineering (1)
Required Skills
Communications
Requirements
  • Bachelor's degree in Engineering, Engineer-In-Training registration with a state board, and four years of professional experience in engineering
  • Bachelor's degree in Engineering from an ABET accredited program, and eight years of professional experience in engineering
  • Bachelor's degree in Engineering from a non-ABET accredited program, and twelve years of professional experience in engineering
  • Valid driver's license
  • Requires the ability to communicate with internal and/or external customers in order to obtain and/or provide explanations and/or information on technical concepts to individuals without experience or knowledge of the technical area
  • Requires the ability to perform algebraic, trigonometric and geometric operations and/or moderately complex statistical and/or accounting methods
  • Requires advanced knowledge of various software applications to create complex documents, reports and graphics
  • Works in an office environment, occasionally outdoors
  • Requires occasionally performing activities including, but not limited to, bending, stooping, grasping, reaching, twisting, turning and/or lifting
  • As a Safety-Sensitive position, pre and post-employment screenings, including but not limited to drug testing as outlined by the Department of Transportation (DOT) and Pipeline & Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA), and motor vehicle record (MVR) background checks are required
Responsibilities
  • Operates with considerable latitude in performing complex technical assignments involving the construction of new and maintenance of existing pipeline systems including selection of materials, development of procedures, compliance with applicable codes and inspection of work in progress
  • Evaluates leakage survey effectiveness
  • Operates pipeline system including regulation, measurement, curtailment and loss or gain of natural gas
  • Complies with Federal, state and local rules and regulations
  • Designs system mains, regulator and meter settings and corrosion control protection
  • Provides input regarding the development and evaluation of the Company's operating standards
  • Conducts product evaluation and presents recommendations to standards committee based on product safety, economics of use and user friendliness
  • Reviews paperwork regarding completed jobs for accuracy and adherence to original design specifications
  • Provides engineering specifications, surveys and directions that are necessary for project completion on schedule and within budget
  • Assists in the coordination of activities between Engineering and Operations to ensure the timely completion of projects
  • Provides specialized reports and studies as required
  • Determines and develops approach to solutions
Desired Qualifications
  • Knowledge of compression, and storage wells, dehydration, flow control and associated control systems within area storage and compressor facilities to evaluate proposals for additions and modifications
  • Knowledge of federal and state regulations applicable to design and construction of compressor and gas conditioning projects
  • Knowledge in the selection of the most appropriate and cost-effective type compression for the application
  • Knowledge of industry trends and new technologies in areas of compressor station automation, modernization and emission control technologies

Atmos Energy is a regulated natural-gas distributor that serves more than three million customers in eight states from its Dallas, Texas headquarters. It delivers natural gas to residential, commercial, and industrial customers and earns most of its revenue from the rates charged for gas distribution. The company actively invests in its pipeline infrastructure, replacing and upgrading pipelines to improve safety and reliability. Atmos Energy differentiates itself by being one of the largest gas-only utilities in the United States, operating under a regulated framework with a broad service footprint, and prioritizing infrastructure modernization to maintain safe delivery. The company’s goal is to provide safe, reliable natural gas service while earning a reasonable return for its investors within the regulatory environment.

Company Size

1,001-5,000

Company Stage

IPO

Headquarters

Dallas, Texas

Founded

1906

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Added 51,000 customers through March 2026, with 39,000 in Texas driving revenue.
  • Raised FY26 EPS guidance to $8.40-$8.50 after $985 million H1 net income.
  • Extended $3 billion credit facilities to 2029 and 2031, bolstering $4.1 billion liquidity.

What critics are saying

  • Texas Railroad Commission methane rules force $500 million retrofits, cutting EPS 10-15% by 2027.
  • FERC Order 2026 mandates $1.2 billion capex on Atmos Pipeline-Texas within 6 months.
  • Sempra's SoCalGas captures 20% of Texas industrial growth, eroding $200 million revenue by 2028.

What makes Atmos Energy unique

  • Atmos Energy ranks #1 in J.D. Power 2026 customer satisfaction survey for Midwest and South.
  • Texas Rule 77102 defers capital costs, generating $94 million earnings in H1 2026.
  • Pipeline Replacement Program proactively replaces aging infrastructure for safety since 2009.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

Life Insurance

Disability Insurance

Health Savings Account/Flexible Spending Account

Unlimited Paid Time Off

Paid Vacation

Paid Sick Leave

Paid Holidays

Hybrid Work Options

401(k) Retirement Plan

401(k) Company Match

Wellness Program

Employee Assistance Program

Company News

KERA
Apr 3rd, 2026
Atmos Energy reports old pipe leak in Lake Dallas home explosion, residents criticize city response.

Atmos Energy reports old pipe leak in Lake Dallas home explosion, residents criticize city response. Published April 3, 2026 at 10:25 AM CDT At a Lake Dallas council meeting Wednesday, Atmos Energy officials confirmed a gas leak from an old pipe caused an explosion that significantly injured a woman and displaced others. The special-called meeting took place almost two weeks after the explosion, which sparked much criticism from residents toward city officials. Residents complained about a lack of communication and coordination after the explosion. Most all seats in the council chamber were full with residents, and each frustrated resident's remarks were met with a smattering of applause from attendees. The explosion on March 19 destroyed a home at 620 Moseley St. and hospitalized the resident. The Lake Cities Fire Department was dispatched to the explosion, structure collapse and fire at about 7:06 p.m. The blast blew the roof off the home, leveling the walls and trapping a woman beneath the rubble, according to a lawsuit filed against Atmos. That woman, later identified as Jessica Bailey Lopez, was transported to a landing zone at 501 Swisher Road where she was then airlifted for treatment at a hospital ICU. After the public comment session, City Manager Luke Olson provided an account of the explosion and responded to some criticisms. Atmos Energy officials reported they identified a main line gas leak under Wilson Drive just south of Moseley Street that contributed to the explosion. The exact cause or timing of the leak is yet to be determined, Atmos Energy officials said, and a portion of the pipe was sent to a lab Wednesday for further testing. "The isolated leak was on a short section of pipe that was made of material installed in the 1970s by a predecessor company," said Kyle Slaughter, Atmos Energy's vice president of operations. "Predecessor companies worked to remove this type of pipe from the system. It appears this small section of pipe was not found in that effort and for that reason, we did not know it was there." Atmos Energy acquired the gas distribution system in 2004, Slaughter said, and has worked to identify such materials and remove them since then. "We are not aware of the presence of it anywhere else in Lake Dallas," Slaughter said. Slaughter said Atmos Energy believes the leak under Wilson Drive was an isolated incident and "not reflective of a broader system issue." "A number of homes were evacuated" and Atmos Energy shut off natural gas service to the area, leaving about 350 homes without service, Slaughter said. Olson reported a majority of residents were able to return to their homes by 3 p.m. on March 20, apart from one home that sustained significant structural damage. Portions of Moseley Street remained restricted as of Thursday afternoon. "We continue to find that the system is performing as expected and operating safely," Slaughter said Wednesday night. The Texas Railroad Commission, which regulates natural gas pipelines, also continues to investigate the explosion. Commission personnel were not present at the meeting. Two separate gas line breaks that occurred on March 17 were unrelated to the March 19 explosion, Olson reported. Lopez sues Atmos Energy. Lopez filed a $1 million lawsuit on March 24 against Atmos Energy. The lawsuit states that she sustained "life-altering, catastrophic injuries that include extensive, severe burns over her face and body, broken bones, and wounds from blast projectiles." The lawsuit accuses Atmos of neglecting and failing to maintain its natural gas line, which leaked and caused gas to migrate into Lopez's home, where it ignited and caused the explosion. She was not a customer of Atmos, according to the suit. Atmos has been served with the suit but had not filed a response as of Thursday afternoon. Kelly Biegler, Atmos Energy's vice president of public affairs, gave a statement on Wednesday about Lopez and others affected by the explosion. "We care very deeply about the safety of every community, including Lake Dallas," Biegler said. "It's our highest priority and that's why we're committed to understanding what happened and taking appropriate action to ensure it doesn't happen again." Lopez's lawsuit states she is lucky to be alive. Other victims of home explosions related to Atmos Energy have not been so lucky. In January 2024, a Carrollton resident's home exploded. Sergio Valdez filed a lawsuit the following day which stated an Atmos Energy gas line leaked into the pipes of his home and caused an explosion when someone lit a cigarette. Valdez was hospitalized with severe burns and died weeks later, his attorney told WFAA. Melinda Gonzales was renting a home on Huntingdon Avenue in Dallas when it exploded, killing her, in 2021. Her family filed a lawsuit against Atmos Energy for allegedly failing to cap and secure gas lines during maintenance and repairs on her street. A 12-year-old girl was also killed in a Dallas home explosion in 2018. The National Transportation Safety Board found Atmos Energy responsible for the incident and fined the energy company $1.6 million. City disaster response complaints. A couple residents who addressed the council thanked the city for their response to the disaster. Another handful of residents lamented a shortage of communication and direction from the city in the immediate aftermath of the explosion. People, including elderly and sick residents, were evacuated from their homes "with no information of where to go or what to do," resident Jonathan Graves said. "The city of Lake Dallas failed some of its citizens," Graves said. "I can understand why this event was hard to manage for those in charge, because they had not pre-established plans on how to handle situations like the one that arose two weeks ago." Resident Scott Griffin called for the city manager's resignation over what he called a pattern of dysfunction. "You routinely ignore legitimate residents' concerns," Griffin said." You fail to respond in a timely, professional manner. You slow walk, you block, you do nothing but absolute minimum functionality. While you snooze and check the boxes the residents of Lake Dallas continue to suffer the consequences." The city also got flack for canceling the next meeting after the explosion. The city manager explained that it would not have been able to discuss the explosion since the agenda was posted beforehand and they could not deviate from agenda topics. Olson told residents he is proud of how Lake Dallas and its neighboring agencies came together to respond to the disaster. Olson also reported Atmos Energy coordinated directly with homeowners to provide hotel accommodations and assistance for residents without gas. One resident, Wendy Orosco, said Atmos' accommodations weren't timely enough. Orosco's neighbors, one of which has stage four cancer, had to evacuate but had nowhere to go. "Thankfully, the daughter thought to call us and of course we opened our home to them," Orosco said. "We only had the living room to offer and they slept on a sectional, all three of them. [The mother] with stage four cancer had to sleep sitting straight up." By the time the family was offered a hotel, Orosco said, they were able to go back to their home. "There was no communication until the next day at 2 p.m.," Orosco said. "For those that had been displaced, that was almost 24 hours too late." Olson did admit that the city could have done a better job of communicating and getting the contact information of all the evacuated residents for follow ups. He also said the city could have come up with a centralized location to send evacuees. Residents also complained of impoliteness from Lake Dallas officers who were evacuating people. Olson asked residents to give first responders "a little grace... in a very difficult situation," and remarked that evacuating is sometimes going to be difficult and uncomfortable for people. The city manager told residents they are working on three or four dedicated locations for any future evacuations, and other disaster procedures. Resident Christina Watson said she hopes the city looks to other municipalities for guidance on developing an emergency action plan for the future. "I hope that they dedicate time at a future council meeting to discuss their emergency action plans with the residents of our city," Watson said. "So that we, the residents of the city, are confident in your ability to navigate us through tough times instead of cowering behind closed doors." BROOKE COLOMBO can be reached at 940-566-6882 and [email protected]. For more than 120 years, the Denton Record-Chronicle has been Denton County's source for locally produced, fact-based journalism. Your support through a tax-deductible donation or low-cost subscription is vital to its ability to deliver credible, relevant, unique coverage of its community.

SSBCrack News
Apr 1st, 2026
SG Americas Securities boosts Atmos Energy stake 186.6% to $12.9M

SG Americas Securities LLC has increased its stake in Atmos Energy Corporation by 186.6%, purchasing an additional 50,252 shares in the fourth quarter to bring total holdings to 77,177 shares valued at approximately $12.9 million. The transaction, detailed in SG Americas' Q4 2025 13F filing submitted on 29 March 2026, reflects confidence in the utility company's growth prospects. Atmos Energy provides natural gas services to over 3 million customers across eight states and has been expanding its pipeline infrastructure whilst investing in system upgrades. The investment aligns with broader trends in the utility sector, where companies are prioritising infrastructure improvements to maintain competitive service levels and safety standards.

MarketScreener
Mar 30th, 2026
Atmos Energy extends $3B credit facilities to 2029 and 2031

Atmos Energy Corporation has extended the maturity dates of its two senior unsecured revolving credit facilities by one year each, effective 27 March 2026. The company's $1.5 billion three-year credit facility, originally entered in March 2024 with Crédit Agricole as administrative agent, now matures on 28 March 2029. Its $1.5 billion five-year credit facility has been extended to 28 March 2031. Both facilities allow lenders to elect maturity extensions of up to one year following requests from the company, with a maximum of two such extensions permitted under each agreement. The extensions were made pursuant to the terms of the respective revolving credit agreements.

Investing.com
Mar 30th, 2026
Atmos Energy extends maturity of two $1.5 billion credit facilities by one year By Investing.com

Atmos Energy extends maturity of two $1.5 billion credit facilities by one year

Lyons & Simmons, LLP
Mar 25th, 2026
Lyons & Simmons files lawsuit against Atmos Energy following Lake Dallas home explosion.

Lyons & Simmons files lawsuit against Atmos Energy following Lake Dallas home explosion. March 25, 2026 | By Lyons & Simmons, LLP Lyons & Simmons, LLP has filed a lawsuit against Atmos Energy Corporation on behalf of Jessica Bailey Lopez, who suffered catastrophic injuries after a March 19, 2026, Lake Dallas home explosion and fire destroyed her home and left her trapped beneath the debris. Mrs. Bailey Lopez had no gas appliances in her home and was not a customer of Atmos Energy, but her home was located close to an Atmos Energy gas main that leaked natural gas into the soil under and around her home. She sustained severe burns and severe orthopedic injuries in addition to other serious injuries for which she continues to receive treatment and remains hospitalized in critical condition. Her entire neighborhood remains evacuated from the leak. "People's homes and people's lives should not be ripped apart because of leaking gas utility infrastructure," said Michael Lyons, co-founding partner of Lyons & Simmons, LLP. "Our client's life has been forever altered. This lawsuit is about holding the gas company accountable when they fail to properly monitor and maintain their own gas system." The lawsuit is styled and numbered Jessica Bailey Lopez v. Atmos Energy Corporation; CC-26-02414-A; County Court at Law No. 1. Gas explosions often leave victims and families facing devastating physical, emotional, and financial consequences. These cases frequently involve questions about pipeline maintenance, leak detection, emergency response, and whether warning signs were missed or ignored. At Lyons & Simmons, its team has handled catastrophic explosion and fire cases involving severe injuries, wrongful death, and allegations of preventable utility failures. When utility companies and other corporate defendants fail to prioritize public safety, the consequences can be permanent.

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