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Construction Site Accidents and Injuries
Home :: Business :: Legal
By: Gary E Rosenberg Email Article
Word Count: 902 Digg it | Del.icio.us it | Google it | StumbleUpon it

  

A. Overview

Construction projects can be dangerous places to work. Tools and materials get tossed around. Large, heavy objects are moved from place to place. Great forces are unleashed; chemicals are used. Torches and flame and pressure may be applied. Injuries can occur at even the safest job sites.

Accidents at construction jobs are divided roughly into two categories - height-related injuries, and everything else. "Everything else" can be stumbling on a hammer, or getting an electrical shock, or getting hurt because of defective or unsafe machinery, or anything else that's not height-related. "Height-related" usually means a fall, or an object dropped from above.

Construction site accident cases tend to be very complicated. Usually, there are many companies involved and it's not always clear who is to blame for the cause of an accident and resulting injury. Responsibility may fall on a company that the injured worker does not even know about, such as the owner of the construction site, a sub-contractor, construction manager, materials supplier, or general contractor. Additionally, there are many different rules and regulations intended to guarantee a worker's safety, which negligent parties sometimes use clever defense attorneys to try to wriggle out of.

Complicating the picture is Worker's Compensation insurance, which every employer must have available to its workers. Whether you're a mason or carpenter, electrician or laborer, iron worker or painter, you can not sue your employer if you're injured. The injured worker can only receive Worker's Compensation, which is guaranteed, but tends to pay a small amount of money for lost wages and other benefits and is usually limited in the amount of time that it will pay the hurt claimant. The only way around New York's Worker's Compensation law is to sue a person or company that is not the injured person's employer - not a simple matter. This requires figuring out who did what, where, at the job site.

B. Some Law

One of the best known worker's protection laws is New York's Labor Law, section 240, which is intended to protect workers from height-related risks. That law states:

1. All contractors and owners and their agents, except owners of one and two-family dwellings who contract for but do not direct or control the work, in the erection of, demolition, repairing, altering, painting, cleaning or pointing of a building or structure shall furnish or erect, or cause to be furnished or erected for the performance of such labor, scaffolding, hoists, stays, ladders, slings, hangers, blocks, pulleys, braces, irons, ropes and other devices, which shall be so constructed, placed and operated as to give proper protection to a person so employed.

So if an injured worker was engaged in "erection of, demolition, repairing, altering, painting, cleaning or pointing" and using "scaffolding, hoists, stays, ladders, slings, hangers, blocks, pulleys, braces, irons, ropes and other devices" he or she has "super-protection" under New York State law. But there are several loopholes, so an experienced accident or personal injury construction law lawyer is necessary in these cases.

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FREE books and reports! For more information about New York car accidents and personal injury request attorney & author Gary Rosenberg's FREE book: Warning! Things That Can Destroy Your Car Accident Case (And the Insurance Companies Already Know These Things), at http://www.GreatLegalBooks.com . For more information and FREE reports, visit my website, http://www.GaryRosenberg-Law.com .

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