Construction Site Injuries
Construction Site Injuries
Working at a construction site is one of the most dangerous
jobs in the country. Construction accidents injure or kill
thousands of workers every year.
These accidents occur when the safety engineers and safety
programs that the construction companies are obligated to
oversee are either negligent or absent. No matter what the
cause or nature of the injury, the worker is entitled to some
kind of compensation.
When a construction worker is injured on the job, he or she
cannot, in most instances, sue the employer for work related
injuries. A third party, however, can be shown to be liable
for negligence when an injury occurs on the job site, but
even if the worker is injured due to his or her own carelessness,
there is compensation available in most states through the
Workers Compensation Act.
Benefits such as weekly payments and medical expenses are
awarded to an injured worker, but often these are not enough
to cover the pain and suffering associated with an on-the-job
injury. Weekly payments are based on a percentage of worker's
weekly earnings and on the severity of the disability, whether
it is a temporary total disability or a permanent partial
disability.
The medical expenses cover only those treatments deemed necessary
and related to the specific work injury.
Certain circumstances can place blame for injuries that occur
on the job site on a third party. The owners, architects,
contractors and equipment manufacturers can all be liable
for insufficient safety measures when an accident occurs.
The general contractor and all subcontractors are responsible
for providing the appropriate safety provisions to ensure
the construction site is reasonable safe. It is their obligation
to warn of possible hazards on the site, to hire employees
who will use caution while working, to coordinate job safety
and to check that the safety specifications are being followed.
Manufacturers of construction equipment are responsible for
designing and maintaining safe products. Defective or dangerous
products may be at fault in a construction accident. With
all of the equipment used on a construction site, the chance
for injury is great, but if the proper safety measures are
not employed in the making of this equipment, the chance of
an injury or a death occurring increase greatly. The manufacturers
on this equipment can be found liable when an accident occurs
due to one of their products.
Equipment used on a construction site include the following:
scaffolding, cranes, power tools, derricks, hoists, conveyors,
woodworking tools, ladders, winches, trucks, graters, scrapers,
tractors, bulldozers, forklifts, back hoes, heavy equipment,
boilers, pressure vessels, gas detectors and other types of
construction equipment.
If you have experienced an accident and have been injured,
call us at (877) 288-9733 today. We can refer you to the right
personal injury and accident lawyers.
Call us now - (877) 288-9733
The information provided on AccidentTreatment.com is not intended to be legal
advice or medical opinion, but merely conveys general information related to legal
issues commonly encountered. The hiring of a lawyer is an important decision that
should not be based solely upon advertisements.
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