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Archive for the ‘construction site accident’ Category

Milpitas: Carpenter Buried Alive at Dangerous Construction Site

Tuesday, January 31st, 2012
Milpitas Construction Site Accident Lawyers

A worker was buried alive at a dangerous construction site in Milpitas. (Video capture: San Jose Mercury News)

State officials are considering filing criminal charges against a contractor after a worker was buried alive Saturday at a dangerous construction site in Milpitas.

City officials had previously ordered all work to be stopped because the hillside might collapse.

•   A contractor received a stop-work order due to unstable soil but continued work at the site anyway.

•   A dirt wall collapsed into a trench and buried a worker alive. 

•   The contractor, who was in China, may face criminal charges.

The workplace accident occurred at about 10:30 a.m., according to an ABC News report.

Keyvan Irannejad, chief building inspector for the city of Milpitas, said the victim — 37-year-old Raul Zapata of Hayward — was working at the Calaveras Ridge Estates construction site  when a 12-foot wall of unstable soil caved in on him.

Other workers — including family members — tried to pull him out but he was crushed beneath an avalanche of dirt.  Zapata’s brother, cousin, and nephew were working at the site that day, but they were unable to save him. They told ABC News that they watched in horror as he was buried alive.

When police and firefighters arrived at the scene, it was too late to save Zapata. He was entombed in the 12-feet-deep trench that had been dug as a placement site for the foundation of a 5,800-square-foot house.

The soil was so unstable that anything rescue workers could do to pull Zapata’s body out from under the mountain of loose dirt would make matters worse — and would put the rescue crew in danger of being buried themselves. They were not able to retrieve his body until Monday night.

The general contractor, U.S. Sino Investment Inc., had been issued a work stoppage order three days earlier because the hillside was at risk of collapsing due to a combination of poor work by the contractor and the previous weekend’s rains, according to a San Jose Mercury News report. But the contractor pressed forward anyway — and did not tell any of the workers about the stoppage order.

Many of the construction workers are from Mexico and are undocumented. That is not an issue, as far as the state Division of Occupational Safety and Health (Cal/OSHA) is concerned.

“This is a situation which has nothing to do with an immigration status,” Cal/OSHA spokesperson Erika Monterroza said. “They have the right to work in an area that is safe, that has the sufficient protection in order for them to work safely.”

Local contractors and building tradespeople are outraged at the behavior of the construction company, which is run by CEO Richard Liu. Liu is believed to have gone to China.

“It’s clear this person has no regard for employees,” said Michael Miller from the Builders Exchange of Santa Clara County. “To continue a job after getting a stop notice like that is just absolutely appalling.”

It’s also illegal.

“Well, obviously, when a stop work order is issued, it is illegal to continue with the work and they can be subject to the fine and the penalties,”  Irannejad said.

There’s a second legal issue as well. Cal/OSHA investigators discovered that the company has no Workers Compensation insurance, so it could not legally employ any workers in any case. A fire department official told the Mercury News that the Calaveras Ridge construction site is now being treated as a crime scene.

State officials were in the process of determining whether they would file criminal charges against the company.

Milpitas Wrongful Death Lawyers

The trial attorneys at Blackman Legal Group, a California-based law firm founded by renowned trial attorney Clifford Blackman, have successfully represented the families of wrongful death victims for 35 years. The nationwide toll-free number to call for a free consultation is 1-866-692-8126.

Critical Condition: Eureka Construction Worker Hit By Teen Driver

Wednesday, December 28th, 2011

Eureka Pedestrian Accident Lawyers

Construction site accident: A road construction worker remains hospitalized in critical condition after he was hit by a teen driver Tuesday in Eureka.

•   A road worker was on duty in a construction zone surrounded by cones. There were signs diverting traffic around the workers.

•   A 17-year-old driver said his windshield fogged over and he was unable to see the road. He drove over the comes and struck the construction worker from behind. 

•   The worker was hospitalized and remains in critical condition.

The accident occurred at 9:20 a.m., according to a report in the Eureka Times-Standard.

The California Highway Patrol said 68-year-old Kenneth Newell of Arcata was operating a grinder in a construction zone on Myrtle Avenue near Pennsylvania Avenue at the time of the accident. There were traffic cones around the area and signs that directed southbound traffic into the left turn lane, away from workers.

The CHP report said 17-year-old Eugene Palmer of Eureka was traveling southbound on Myrtle Avenue when his windshield fogged over and blocked his view. He drove over the cones and into the construction site. Palmer’s vehicle struck Newell from behind.

Newell suffered major injuries. He was transported to  St. Joseph Hospital in Eureka, where he remained in critical condition Wednesday afternoon.

Road Construction Site Injury Statistics

Each year over 20,000 workers are injured in road construction work zones, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Highway Administration. These injuries typically are caused by:

  • Contact with objects or equipment (35 percent)
  • Slips, trips, or falls (20 percent)
  • Overexertion (15 percent)
  • Transportation incidents (12 percent)
  • Exposure to harmful substances or environments (5 percent).

More than half of all road construction fatalities involve being hit by a vehicle.

Eureka Construction Site Accident Lawyers

The trial attorneys at Blackman Legal Group, a California-based law firm founded by renowned trial attorney Clifford Blackman, have successfully represented construction site accident victims and their families for 35 years. The nationwide toll-free number to call for a free consultation is 1-866-692-8126.

Van Plunges 50 Feet at Bakersfield Construction Site, Driver Killed

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

Fatal car accident: A 20-year-old driver died Tuesday night after he ran a stop sign and his van plunged 50 feet down an embankment at a roadside construction site in Bakersfield.

•   Construction workers found a wrecked van with the driver’s dead body inside.

•   Police believe the 20-year-old driver failed to stop at a stop sign in a road construction zone and plunged off the edge of the roadway to a construction area below.

•   It is not known if the road conditions were unsafe due to the construction.

Police are not sure of the exact time of the accident but believe it happened late Tuesday night, according to a KERO News report.

California Highway Patrol officers said that a construction worker arrived at work Wednesday morning and discovered the wreckage. The worker looked inside the mangled van and found the body of Bakersfield resident Samuel Joseph Gonzalez.

CHP investigators believe Gonzalez was driving his 1997 Dodge van southbound on Allen Road at a speed that was too fast for the construction zone near Hageman Road.

Officers said Gonzales probably failed to stop at the stop sign on Hageman Road, crashed through a concrete barrier along the south edge of the roadway, and then continued on an unfinished road under construction.

The van went over the edge of the road and plunged 40 to 50 feet down to a construction area, where it crashed. Gonzales died in his van.

Officers did not say they suspected alcohol was a factor in the accident.

A local resident who commented on the KERO website said, “It’s just as likely that the construction zone was poorly marked and poorly lit. When quiting time comes, road crews throw together a patchwork of ‘safety’ measures and split. … Hazards are left unaddressed at the end of the working day.”

Investigators did not comment on any unsafe road conditions that may have existed as a result of the construction zone.

The fatal accident is under investigation.

Road Construction Accidents

More than 1,000 people are killed — and another 52,000 are injured — each year in highway construction zone accidents, Federal Highway Administrator Mary Peters told the Insurance Journal.

Four out of five of those fatalities are drivers and passengers, not highway workers, Peters said. California is second only to Texas in the number of highway construction zone fatalities, according to statistics from the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials.

Peters said the number of deaths could be decreased by closing roads during construction when possible.

Bakersfield Car Accident Lawyers

The trial attorneys at Blackman Legal Group, a California-based law firm founded by renowned trial attorney Clifford Blackman, have successfully represented car accident victims and their families for 35 years. The nationwide toll-free number to call for a free consultation is 1-866-692-8126.

Killed on the Job: Truck Runs Over Paver in Palo Alto Fry’s Parking Lot

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011

Killed on the job: A big-rig backed over and killed a worker who was paving the Palo Alto Fry’s Electronics parking lot Tuesday evening.

•   A paver who was working at an excavation site in front of Fry’s Electronics was cleaning the parking lot area in preparation for ending the work day.

•   A dump truck accidentally backed up and ran over the paver. The truck driver didn’t even know he hit the man until he got out of the truck and found the man under the wheels.

•   Paramedics tried to assist the man but he died at the scene.

•   Cal/OSHA is investigating. They want to know if the truck had a functioning back-up alarm and whether traffic controls were in place.

The construction site accident occurred at around 6:45 p.m., according to a Palo Alto Online news report.

Palo Alto police said an employee of Oakley-based G&S Paving had been working in the parking lot in front of the store at 340 Portage Avenue. The man, later identified as 64-year-old Richard Loza of Pittzburg, was cleaning up the area in preparation for leaving when big-rig dump truck backed over him.

The truck driver was backing up when “he heard an odd noise,” said Patricia Ortiz, a spokesperson for the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health( Cal/OSHA). When the driver stopped and got of the truck, he discovered Loza beneath the wheels of the big-rig.

“The driver found a mangled body beneath the wheels of the truck,” Ortiz said.

Police officers and firefighter emergency crews responded to the scene, according to the San Jose Mercury News. Paramedics attempted to save Loza, but he died at the scene.

“A representative of Cal/OSHA was contacted due to the industrial nature of the accident, and they took over the investigation into the incident,” the Palo Alto police Sgt. Rich Bullerjahn said in a written statement.

The construction project had to do with digging up an old storage tank at the site, according to Palo Alto Public Works engineer Mike Nafziger.  It’s common to excavate old septic, gas or oil tanks that are no longer in use, Nafziger said. An excavation permit had been issued to American Integrated Services, a general contractor, on September 30.

G&S Paving is a subcontractor for American Integrated Services. The involvement of a sub-contractor necessitates a “multi-employer investigation” into the fatal workplace accident, Ortiz said.

Cal/OSHA wants to find out whether there was a functioning back-up alarm on the truck and whether there was proper traffic control in place at the time of the fatal accident, Ortiz said. The agency issued an order prohibiting use of the dump truck until the investigation is completed.

Ortiz said Cal/OSHA also has a number of other concerns in this case, but she did not elaborate on those. She estimated that the investigation could take up to 6 months to complete.

Palo Alto Workplace Accident Lawyers

The trial attorneys at Blackman Legal Group, a California-based law firm founded by renowned trial attorney Clifford Blackman, have successfully represented workplace accident victims and their families for 35 years. The nationwide toll-free number to call for a free consultation is 1-866-692-8126.

4 Injured in San Francisco High-Rise Construction Site Accident

Friday, September 2nd, 2011
San Francisco Construction Site Accident Lawyers
Four workers were injured — three seriously — in a high-rise construction site accident in San Francisco. (Photo: CBS News)

Four workers were injured in a high-rise construction site accident Wednesday when a barrier encasing wet concrete collapsed on the roof of a San Francisco building.

•   Workers were pouting cement on the roof of a six-story apartment building near AT&T Park when the concrete form collapsed.

•   Four workers in a stairwell below were practically buried alive in the wet concrete. The flow of the sludge forced them three stories down the stairwell.

•   Co-workers pulled them out of the concrete before it dried. They were hospitalized with major injuries, including broken arms and legs.

The accident occurred at about 8 a.m., according to a report in the San Francisco Chronicle.

The crew was working on a six-story apartment building at 2235 Third Street (at 19th Street) in the Dogpatch neighborhood, not far from the Giants’ AT&T Park.

The barrier was holding wet concrete that was being poured on the roof. San Francisco fire battalion chief Charles Crane told CBS News the barrier — or form, as it is called — collapsed on four workers who were in the stairwell below. The impact caused the workers to fall three stories, as the wet cement practically buried them alive.

“They were covered in concrete,” fire department spokesperson Mindy Talmadge said in an Associated Press report published by KTVU News. “Their co-workers uncovered them and pulled them out.”

The four injured workers were rushed to San Francisco General Hospital. Three of them suffered major injuries, including broken arms and legs, and were listed in serious condition. The fourth suffered lesser injuries and was later released.

The workers, whose names were not released, were employed by Nibbi Brothers General Contractors of San Francisco. The company’s chief financial officer, Rick Fedick, said he did not know why the form failed.

California Division of Occupational Safety and Health (Cal/OSHA) officials, city building inspectors, and the District Attorney’s Office were all at the scene to investigate the high-rise construction site accident.

Cal/OSHA spokesman Dean Fryer said the safety agency’s investigators would try to determine what caused the concrete form to collapse.

“We need to dig into their procedures and the materials they’re using,” Fryer said. “We’re going to want to talk to employees on the site and take a close look at the site itself.”

Investigators did not find any safety issues with other forms near the collapse, Fryer said.

The west side of the building was red-tagged for Cal/OSHA inspectors and was closed to any further work for the time being. Work resumed later on the east side of the 196-unit, $40 million project.

San Francisco Construction Site Accident Lawyers

The trial attorneys at Blackman Legal Group, a California-based law firm founded by renowned trial attorney Clifford Blackman, have been representing injury victims since 1976, and have special expertise in cases involving construction site accidents.  The nationwide toll-free number to call for a free consultation is 1-866-692-8126.

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