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Michael Gunzburg, P.C. New York City Personal Injury Lawyer
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New York City Scaffold Accident Lawyer

Labor Law Sec. 240, the “Scaffold Law,” requires building owners and general contractors to provide workers with proper scaffolds, hoists, harnesses, and other appropriate worksite safety equipment for use when working at elevations. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, construction is one of the most dangerous industries, accounting for a record high 20.8% of all workplace deaths in 2001. New York City construction accident statistics compiled by the Department of Buildings document that, notwithstanding the Scaffold Law, scaffolding safety remains a serious problem at many worksites. According to the Department, during 2002 scaffolding accidents comprised 56% of 101 recorded construction accidents. Contact our New York scaffolding accident attorney for a free consultation today.

Are you in need of a New York City scaffolding accident attorney?

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has estimated that 65% of construction employees work on scaffolds frequently, so it is not surprising that some of the most common accidents at construction sites involve scaffolds or other types of lifts, hoists, or ladders. These accidents are typically the most serious in terms of severity of injuries, which can result from construction workers’ falls from defective, improperly installed, or unreasonably safe scaffold equipment; an employer’s failure to ensure the use of protective equipment; and by objects falling onto workers from scaffolds, lifts, and ladders.

Every employer, supervisor, and worker involved in work from scaffolds must comply with OSHA regulations as to, among other considerations, construction and inspection:

Design & Construction – The design and construction of scaffolds must conform with OSHA requirements concerning type of equipment, rated capacities, construction methods, and use. Each scaffold and scaffold component must be capable of supporting its own weight plus at least four times the maximum intended load without failure. Each suspension rope must be capable of supporting at least six times the maximum intended load.

Inspection – Employers should require a competent person to inspect all scaffolds and scaffold components for visible defects before use on each work shift. Scaffolds should be erected, moved, dismantled, or altered only under the supervision of a competent person. All components of personal fall protection equipment (including body belts or harnesses, lanyards, droplines, trolley lines, and points of anchorage) should be inspected by a competent person before use. Any visibly damaged or worn equipment should be removed from service immediately.

Are you in need of a New York scaffolding accident attorney? Contact our New York scaffolding accident attorney for a free consultation today!

We stand ready to help you in every way. Remember to call an experienced scaffolding accident attorney to learn your legal rights.

NYC Scaffold Law

The Department of Labor estimates that over half of the construction industry works on scaffolds, which means close to 2.3 million workers. These scaffold workers risk serious injury or even death every day at their jobs. While there are laws in place which require certain scaffold standards, these by no means guarantee a safe day for workers on their construction site. Frequently, mistakes and even negligence occurs on construction sites. Between 1 in 5 injuries that occur on a construction site involve a scaffold related accident. These accidents affect workers, and everyday people passing by the site. Serious scaffold injuries typically involve a plank slipping, a worker being struck by a falling object, and a scaffold support just giving way to the weight of the worker and other objects on the scaffold.

Are you aware of the new scaffold law and how it can affect your claim? Our New York scaffolding injury attorney can help you understand the new scaffold law and how it can benefit your case today.

Scaffold accidents occur all the time and frequently involve non English speaking workers (immigrant workers). One such accident involved, a suspended scaffold that plunged 40 floors to the ground crushing a car and killing 3 innocent women. Another recent scaffold accident involved several Mexican immigrant workers who were standing on a suspended scaffold when it collapsed 4 stories plunging the workers to their deaths. These incidents could have been avoided if the scaffold safety regulations were properly followed.

Due to a building boom in New York City, more scaffold related and construction accident injuries and deaths are occurring. Mayor Bloomberg stated that “The unprecedented growth in our city is great news for our economy and for the tens of thousands of New Yorkers working in the building trades…But as the number of construction and maintenance projects in the City has risen, tragically, so too has the number of scaffold accidents.” The most recent statistics from the year leading up to 2006 show a 60 percent increase in deaths as compared to the year before it. Better protection is possible and it can save thousands of injuries and hundreds of deaths a year. In addition safe scaffolds are good for business because they can save over $90 million in lost work days.

Recent legislation was passed to help protect workers from scaffold accidents. There are Laws that already exist which provide for the scaffold footing or anchorage to be secure and stable, and the scaffold must be constructed to bear four times the maximum weight. Specific rules exist depending on whether the scaffolding is light, medium or heavy duty. A light scaffold may not be loaded with more than 25 pounds per live load per square foot, while a medium or heavy scaffold can bear no more than 50 or 75 pounds respectively. There are also planking rules, maintenance and repair rules, lumber rules, safety railings and proper overhead protection depending on the height of the scaffold. Despite these intricate rules, workers and pedestrians continue to get injured and killed.

Are you aware of the new scaffold law and how it can affect your claim? Our New York scaffolding injury attorney can help you understand the new scaffold law and how it can benefit your case today!

As a result, effective November 20, 2006, Local Law 52 of 2005 went into effect in an attempt to further protect workers on scaffolds as well as the public. With the passing of the new law, permit requirements have become more specific. A permit must be obtained and a licensed professional must submit drawings for any scaffolding that is 40 or more feet tall. If these requirements are not met, violations will be issued. Additionally there are specific requirements for people that may install, dismantle, repair, maintain or modify supported scaffolds. A person may not do any of these things without a supported scaffold certificate of completion. The course is modeled after a curriculum created by the United States Department of Labor Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and must be delivered by a registered New York State Department of Labor apprenticeship training program or by an educational institution that is chartered, licensed or registered by the New York State Department of Education. Instructors must be certified under the OSHA provisions for construction safety. 32 hours are required to complete the course and if it was done more than 2 years ago, an 8 hour refresher program must be completed and after official completion this certificate must be available to Department personnel upon request.

Restrictions also apply to supported scaffold users who must also receive a user certificate with its own training requirements. A worker must take a four hour program which may be delivered by New York State Department of Labor apprenticeship program or by an educational institution chartered, licensed or registered by the New York State Department of Education whose instructors must also be certified under OSHA provisions for construction safety.

The New Supported Scaffold Law is a welcome change long overdue in the construction industry and whose purpose is to make construction sites safe for pedestrians and workers alike. This new law was enacted in an effort to minimize the number of accidents on scaffolds which result in serious injury or death. Hopefully, the new laws will further protect workers and pedestrians from such catastrophic and needless events.

Contact Our Experienced NYC Construction Accident Lawyer Today

Are you aware of the new scaffold law and how it can affect your claim? Our New York scaffolding injury attorney can help you understand the new scaffold law and how it can benefit your case today!

Michael Gunzburg is a New York Scaffolding Injury Attorney serving the New York Metropolitan area, including New York City, Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan, Queens, Staten Island, Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester, Rockland and Orange County.

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