Scaffold Safety, Construction

What Is It?
The Scaffold Law, (Labor Law 240/241) was first enacted in the late 19th century. It holds property owners, employers, and contractors ABSOLUTELY LIABLE for ‘gravity related’ injuries that happen on the job. That means there is virtually no defense from a lawsuit, even if the worker’s gross negligence contributed to the accident. Even parties that had no supervisory control over the work are held liable. New York is the only state that still keeps this law on the books.

The Scaffold Law imposes liability even on contractors and owners who had nothing to do with the plaintiff’s accident

The Scaffold Law Costs Taxpayers
The Scaffold Law costs taxpayers $785 million annually. Local governments pay higher costs for capital projects, whether the work is done directly or through private contractors. More than half of the top 30 highest settlements resulted from Scaffold Law claims, and of those, 25% were against public entities. The Scaffold Law is estimated to add $200–$400 million in additional costs to the construction of the new Tappan Zee Bridge. To date, 33 county legislatures in New York—more than half of the state—have passed resolutions calling on the state government to reform the Scaffold Law.

The Scaffold Law Hurts Schools
The New York School Boards Association estimates the Scaffold Law costs upstate schools $200M annually. In 2013, the New York School Construction Authority (SCA) was nearly unable to get insurance for its $2 billion capital program, despite an excellent safety record. The new insurance costs are $240M for 2014, nearly triple that of the previous year. The SCA’s increased insurance costs are equivalent to 8-10 new schools over a 3 year period. Currently, there is a shortage of nearly 50,000 pre-K seats in NYC. Higher insurance costs for the SCA jeopardize the future of their Owner-Controlled Insurance Program, which provides insurance to over 800 M/WBE firms. Without this program, hundreds of M/WBEs may be put out of business.

The Scaffold Law Hurts Workers
The Scaffold Law is associated with an estimated additional construction injuries each year. Reforming the Scaffold Law would create over 27,000 jobs in the construction industry.
Illinois repealed its Scaffold Law in 1995, an construction related fatalities decreased by 28% over the next six years.

The Scaffold Law Increases Construction Costs
The number of Scaffold Law cases has increased 500% since 1990, even though the rate of injury has decreased. Liability costs on one joint NY-NJ bridge projects are more than double on the NY side. New York’s general liability insurance costs, the highest in the nation for construction, are directly correlated to the Scaffold Law, and the number of carriers that write general liability policies in New York is declining. The Scaffold Law costs the private sector an estimated $1.49 billion annually. When the Trial Lawyers tried to reinstate the Scaffold Law in IL after it was repealed, labor unions refused to back the effort because they did not want to hurt the industry.