Crane Accidents in Nassau County, NY
Labor Law 240 Claims
Injured in a crane accident on a Nassau County construction site? New York's Labor Law protects injured construction workers. Free consultation — no fee unless we win.
Crane Accidents in Nassau County: What Workers Need to Know
Nassau County runs a very_high-volume construction market — 580 active permits and roughly 80 major sites operating at any given time. State data shows about 168 construction injury reports filed annually in Nassau. New York's Labor Law sets the rules for these cases — §240(1) for elevation and gravity-related hazards, §241(6) for Industrial Code violations, and §200 for general site-safety negligence. When a Nassau construction worker is hurt in a crane accident, liability can fall on the property owner and general contractor depending on how the injury happened — the analysis below breaks down exactly how the law applies to a crane accident.
How New York Labor Law Applies to a Crane Accident in Nassau County
Three regulatory layers stack, the §240/§241 split turns on whether gravity-on-a-load caused the harm, and cranes carry a product-liability track no other accident type offers.
Crane cases split by mechanism. A dropped or falling hoisted load is a §240(1) case — the falling-object prong, where the load required securing and the rigging or hoist was inadequate; the harm must flow directly from gravity acting on the object (Runner). A worker struck laterally by a swinging load or boom, or caught between, is a §241(6) and §200 case — fault-based, with comparative negligence available. A crane tip-over or collapse is analyzed under both, and a collapse is squarely a §240(1) gravity event because the hoisting device itself failed.
The regulation stacks three deep: federal OSHA Subpart CC, the NY Industrial Code's crane subpart, and — in the five boroughs — a separate NYC Department of Buildings permit and Hoisting Machine Operator license regime. And cranes uniquely open a product-liability track against the manufacturer (boom weld, slewing bearing, wire rope, hook) that runs alongside the Labor Law claims.
How Crane Accidents Happen
Understanding the mechanics of a crane accident matters in a Labor Law 240 case — it determines which specific duty the owner or contractor breached.
Rigging failure during lift
When a crane's wire rope, hook, shackle, or below-the-hook lifting device fails under load, the suspended load drops without warning. Swing radius exclusion zones are designed around rated capacity, not sudden drop trajectories. Workers inside or adjacent to the exclusion zone — often ironworkers guiding the load — absorb the full energy of a swinging or falling load that can weigh tens of thousands of pounds.
Crane collapse — mast or boom failure
Tower crane mast collapses — as in the 2008 East 91st Street and 2008 East 51st Street fatalities in Manhattan — occur when climbing collars are improperly secured or mast pins are missing. The mast shears above a collar and the upper structure falls with no warning onto the surrounding building and street. Injuries include crush trauma, falling debris, and secondary collapse of adjacent structures.
Electrocution from power-line contact
Mobile cranes require a 10-foot minimum clearance from energized lines under 50 kV (29 CFR 1926.1408). On congested urban job sites where clearances cannot always be maintained, the boom contacts the line. Current travels down the load line to the load, the rigging, and the workers in contact with either. Because the crane's steel superstructure is grounded through the tires, the path of least resistance is often through workers standing on or near the crane.
Where Nassau County Cases Are Filed
Nassau County Supreme Court
100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501
10th Judicial District · Second Department
Major Construction Sites in Nassau County
Crane Accidents risks are concentrated wherever large projects operate. These are the highest-activity sites in Nassau County right now:
UBS Arena at Elmont (NY Islanders)
Sports / arena
$1.3B
Complete 2021 / ongoing infrastructure
LIRR Third Track (Nassau segment)
Rail infrastructure
$500M+
Active construction
Nassau Hub Redevelopment (Uniondale)
Mixed-use / commercial
$400M
Active construction
Where Crane Accidents Happen Across Nassau County
Crane accident risk follows the work, and in Nassau County construction concentrates in these areas:
Trauma Centers Serving Nassau County
These accredited trauma centers receive the most serious construction injuries from Nassau County. Medical records from these facilities become key evidence in your claim.
Nassau University Medical Center
2201 Hempstead Turnpike, East Meadow, NY 11554
Level I trauma center for Nassau County. Primary destination for serious construction injuries from Long Island's active development corridor.
Union Locals in Nassau County
The primary unions covering Nassau County construction workers are: LIUNA Local 731, IBEW Local 25, Carpenters Local 279, Ironworkers Local 197, Operating Engineers Local 30. Full list includes 10 active locals on Nassau job sites.
Union membership does not limit your Labor Law rights. Your union cannot negotiate away your right to sue the property owner and general contractor for a construction-site injury. Workers' compensation and a personal injury lawsuit are separate claims — you are entitled to both.
OSHA Standards That Apply to Crane Accidents
29 CFR 1926.501 — Fall Protection - General Requirements
6,763 citations in FY2024 nationwide. OSHA citations for this standard on a Nassau County job site are admissible in a Labor Law 241(6) claim.
29 CFR 1910.1200 — Hazard Communication
3,111 citations in FY2024 nationwide. OSHA citations for this standard on a Nassau County job site are admissible in a Labor Law 241(6) claim.
New York's Industrial Code Rule 23 (12 NYCRR Part 23) adds state-specific requirements on top of OSHA. A violation of Rule 23 that proximately caused your injury can establish liability under Labor Law 241(6), independent of Labor Law 240.
Nassau County Construction History
Mitchel Field to Eisenhower Park Conversion (1917–1960s) — The post-WWII conversion of Mitchel Army Air Field into Nassau County's Eisenhower Park was one of Long Island's largest construction undertakings, employing thousands of building trades workers and setting the stage for the suburban construction boom.
OSHA Standards That Govern Crane Accidents
29 CFR 1926.1402
Ground conditions must be firm, drained, and graded, with supporting materials, to prevent tip-over.
29 CFR 1926.1425
Keep workers clear of a suspended load — the "no one under the load" rule.
29 CFR 1926.1427
Crane operator certification required.
29 CFR 1926.1408
Power-line operations: 20-foot default clearance or the voltage-based clearance table.
NY Industrial Code Subpart 23-8 governs cranes — stability and capacity, posted load charts, a required tag or restraint line where a swinging load creates a hazard, monthly inspection records, and operator certificates of competence. Its specific tag-line, capacity-chart, and inspection provisions are the §241(6) predicates. In NYC, Building Code §BC 3319 and the DOB permit/HMO-license regime add a separate, stricter layer.
How a Crane Accident Happens — and the Injuries It Causes
A dropped load from rigging, sling, hook, wire-rope failure, two-blocking, or overload; a tip-over or overturn from overload, ground or outrigger failure, or exceeding the load chart; a structural or boom collapse; a struck-by from a swinging load with no tag line; a caught-between; or overhead power-line contact. The signature is that a single failure can kill several workers — and pedestrians — at once.
Disproportionately fatal and catastrophic, with high multi-victim potential. Crush injuries and traumatic amputation from dropped loads, multi-victim crushing in a tip-over, catastrophic blunt trauma in a collapse, TBI and fractures from a swinging load, crush asphyxia in a caught-between, and electrocution or arc-flash from line contact.
What Drives the Value of a Nassau Crane Accident Case
Typical case value: $3M - $25M+. Among the highest-value construction claims — death or permanent total disability, with punitive exposure where conduct is reckless. The deepest multi-defendant bench in construction: owner, general contractor, crane owner or lessor, rigging and signal companies, the operator's employer, and the crane or component manufacturer on a separate product-defect track. That drives cross-claims, indemnification, and additional-insured tenders across the entire project chain.
What the defense will argue: Fight the Labor Law characterization — push a lateral, swinging, or caught-between event toward §241(6)/§200 with comparative fault, away from §240(1) strict liability. Argue the load did not require securing, blame operator error by a non-party employer (seeking apportionment), raise product cross-claims (misuse or unauthorized modification), or attribute a tip-over to ground conditions.
Case-value ranges describe general outcomes in New York construction cases — not a prediction or guarantee. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.
The New York Cases That Control a Crane Accident Claim
Runner v. New York Stock Exchange, 13 NY3d 599 (2009)
For a falling/hoisted load, the harm must flow directly from the application of gravity to the object.
Wilinski v. 334 East 92nd Housing Development Fund, 18 NY3d 1 (2011)
Rejected a categorical bar for objects that begin at the worker's level — relevant to crane components toppling near the worker.
Frequently Asked Questions: Crane Accidents in Nassau County
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Other Construction Accidents in Nassau County
This page is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Case outcomes depend on the specific facts of your situation. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. NY Construction Advocate is the client intake service for Haddock Law, a New York law practice that represents injured construction workers directly and, when a case benefits from additional expertise, works with experienced co-counsel. Labor Law 240 cases are handled on a contingency basis.