“Construction workers are exposed to a wider variety of hazards and face a greater risk of work-relatd injury or fatality than employees in any other U.S. industry. The lost-workday case rate for the construction industry was 5.7 per 100 full-time workers, the highest of any major economic sector.”
Construction
accidents occur for a variety of reasons: unsafe working conditions, faulty
equipment, lack of safety precautions or human error. The consequences of a
construction accident can range from injuries that prohibit victims from
earning a living to wrongful death. Thanks to the Structural Work Act in Illinois, workers that
are injured on the job may sue for negligence and strict liability. If the
injury results in death, their family is entitled to do so.
Workers
injured in construction accidents may sue the owner, its agents and contractors
for all damages sustained by virtue of the physical harm done to them. Such
suits are permitted on behalf of injured workers in addition to workers’
compensation benefits they may have received.
According
to 2003 numbers by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the largest number of fatal
work injuries was in the construction sector with a total of 1,126 deaths. The
bureau also reported that highest level of nonfatal worker injuries, as
measured on a lost-workday basis, is again in the construction industry with a
rate of 5.7 days per 100 workers. This is in spite of the fact that the
Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) has budgeted a significant
portion of its resources into the publication and enforcement of safety
standards on construction sites.
In
Illinois and
other states, special statutes were enacted to protect workers involved in
construction-related accidents. These statutes exist because no matter how
stringent the regulations concerning job safety, workers are at risk on a daily
basis from of the inherently dangerous nature of their jobs. This is
exemplified by situations involving:
Scaffolding Accidents
Roof-related falls
Falls from elevated work
surfaces
Workers hit by falling objects
Trench collapses
Electrocution
Fire and explosions
Machinery accidents
Crane, forklift and vehicular
accidents
Equipment failure
Failure to provide safety equipment
Welding accidents
Industrial gases
Owners
and general contractors are obligated to keep construction sites safe. Whether
you are a worker severely injured on the job, or an innocent passer-by injured
in an Illinois
construction site accident, Salvi, Schostok & Pritchard P.C. construction
accident lawyers have the experience and expertise to handle your case and will
get you the maximum monetary reward to which you are entitled.
We
are experienced Illinois and Wisconsin construction accident lawyers
and trial experts with the skill and experience to get the maximum available
money damages for you. Salvi, Schostok & Pritchard P.C. has achieved
significant recoveries for clients, including a $12.56 million settlement on
behalf of a worker injured in Cook
County, Illinois.
If
you or someone you know has been a victim of a construction site accident,
please contact us today for a free, no-obligation consultation.