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Electrocution Accidents in Suffolk County, NY
Labor Law 240 Claims

Injured in a electrocution accident on a Suffolk County construction site? New York's Labor Law protects injured construction workers. Free consultation — no fee unless we win.

Electrocution Accidents in Suffolk County: What Workers Need to Know

Suffolk County runs a very_high-volume construction market — 610 active permits and roughly 84 major sites operating at any given time. State data shows about 178 construction injury reports filed annually in Suffolk. 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 Suffolk construction worker is hurt in a electrocution 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 electrocution accident.

610Active Permits
178Annual Injury Reports
13Fatalities (5 Year)
$2M - $15M+Case Value Range

How New York Labor Law Applies to a Electrocution Accident in Suffolk County

The textbook NON-§240(1) construction injury — a pure shock has no gravity differential, so strict liability does not attach.

A pure electric shock has no elevation differential, so Labor Law §240(1) — limited to gravity-related hazards — does not apply. The Court of Appeals held in Nieves that §240(1) reaches "only a narrow class of special hazards" and not every peril tangentially connected to gravity. Electrocution cases therefore live on §241(6) — through the Industrial Code's electrical-hazard provisions — and on §200 negligence.

§241(6) is the workhorse: it is non-delegable and vicarious, and the owner's or contractor's lack of notice is irrelevant to it. §200 splits two ways — a dangerous-premises track (a pre-existing energized or concealed cable, where liability turns on notice) and a means-and-methods track (a worker mishandling a live tool or temporary line, where liability turns on actual supervisory control). The defining wrinkle: if the shock causes a fall, §240(1) re-enters, but causation becomes a jury question — whether the fall (a §240 hazard) or the shock (not a §240 hazard) caused the injury (Cutaia).

How Electrocution Accidents Happen

Understanding the mechanics of a electrocution accident matters in a Labor Law 240 case — it determines which specific duty the owner or contractor breached.

Ground fault with no GFCI protection

When a tool's insulation is damaged, current finds a path to ground through any conductor in contact with the tool — including a worker's body. At 120V, 60mA (well below the 15-amp circuit breaker threshold) is enough to produce ventricular fibrillation. A GFCI trips at 5mA within 1/40th of a second. On construction sites without required GFCI protection on temporary power, the worker becomes the fault-detection device.

Inadvertent contact with energized conductors

Workers cutting through walls, drilling, or driving stakes can contact buried or enclosed conductors that are not marked, de-energized, or isolated. In urban renovation — where building electrical systems are frequently older than 80 years and wiring is not as-built documented — the location of live conductors is genuinely unknown. Contact is brief but delivers current at 120 or 240V before the worker can break contact.

Arc flash from switchgear or panel work

When an electrician or laborer works near energized bus bars or makes contact with phase conductors in a panel, an arc flash can release thousands of calories per square centimeter in milliseconds. The arc temperature exceeds 35,000°F — hotter than the surface of the sun. Workers within the arc-flash boundary who are not wearing rated PPE suffer full-thickness burns, blast overpressure, and projectile impact from vaporized copper.

Where Suffolk County Cases Are Filed

Suffolk County Supreme Court

Cromarty Court Complex, Riverhead, NY 11901

10th Judicial District · Second Department

Major Construction Sites in Suffolk County

Electrocution Accidents risks are concentrated wherever large projects operate. These are the highest-activity sites in Suffolk County right now:

Long Island Innovation Park at Hauppauge Redevelopment

Industrial / technology park

$500M

Active multi-phase

LIRR Ronkonkoma Double-Track Project

Rail infrastructure

$185M

Active construction

Stony Brook Medicine Research Tower Expansion

Healthcare / research

$200M

Active construction

Where Electrocution Accidents Happen Across Suffolk County

Electrocution accident risk follows the work, and in Suffolk County construction concentrates in these areas:

Brookhaven Islip Huntington Babylon Smithtown

Trauma Centers Serving Suffolk County

These accredited trauma centers receive the most serious construction injuries from Suffolk County. Medical records from these facilities become key evidence in your claim.

LI

Stony Brook University Hospital

101 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook, NY 11794

Level I trauma center for Suffolk County. Primary destination for serious construction injuries from Long Island's active development corridor.

Union Locals in Suffolk County

The primary unions covering Suffolk 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 Suffolk 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 Electrocution Accidents

29 CFR 1926.501Fall Protection - General Requirements

6,763 citations in FY2024 nationwide. OSHA citations for this standard on a Suffolk County job site are admissible in a Labor Law 241(6) claim.

29 CFR 1910.1200Hazard Communication

3,111 citations in FY2024 nationwide. OSHA citations for this standard on a Suffolk 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.

Suffolk County Construction History

Camp Upton to Brookhaven National Laboratory (1917–1947) — Camp Upton's WWI-era construction and its post-war conversion to Brookhaven National Laboratory generated decades of scientific facility and institutional construction, establishing Long Island's building trades on a foundation of federal and research-driven project work.

OSHA Standards That Govern Electrocution Accidents

29 CFR 1926.404(b)(1)

Ground-fault circuit interrupters on 120V receptacles in use, or an assured equipment grounding conductor program.

29 CFR 1926.416(a)(1)

No work near a circuit a worker could contact unless it is de-energized and grounded, or guarded by insulation.

29 CFR 1926.1408

Cranes/equipment near overhead power lines: de-energize and ground, keep 20 feet clearance, or follow the voltage-based clearance table.

NY Industrial Code 23-1.13 ("Electrical hazards") requires the employer to investigate for live circuits and to protect workers by de-energizing and grounding or by effective insulation. Its investigation and protection provisions are recognized §241(6) predicates, and because §241(6) is vicarious, the owner's lack of notice does not defeat the claim.

How a Electrocution Accident Happens — and the Injuries It Causes

Contact with an energized conductor, an overhead line, an ungrounded tool, or concealed live wiring, with current passing through the body. AC is more dangerous than DC because of the tetanic "no-let-go" lock-on. Arc flash (intense radiant heat at a distance) and arc blast (a concussive pressure wave with molten shrapnel) injure without direct contact and are often higher-voltage events.

A genuinely different medical profile from the fall injuries. Ventricular fibrillation and cardiac arrest can occur at currents below ordinary-outlet output; cardiac arrest is the leading cause of immediate death. Thermal burns concentrate at entry and exit wounds but mask far worse deep-tissue ("iceberg") damage, leading to compartment syndrome, rhabdomyolysis, kidney injury, and amputation. Latent injuries — delayed cardiac arrhythmias, neuropsychiatric and neuropathic deficits, and cataracts emerging weeks to years later — are a key litigation point that supports future-medical and permanency claims even when the worker "looked fine."

What Drives the Value of a Suffolk Electrocution Accident Case

Typical case value: $2M - $15M+. Catastrophic burns drive multiple skin-graft surgeries, burn-ICU care, and lifetime scar treatment; disfigurement, amputation and prosthetics, and cardiac or neurological permanency follow. A high proportion are wrongful-death cases. §241(6) vicarious liability frequently yields partial summary judgment on liability, shifting the fight to damages.

What the defense will argue: Keep the case out of §240(1) (no gravity hazard; and where there was a fall, argue the shock, not the device, caused it — Cutaia). Comparative negligence is available under §241(6) and §200 (ignored lockout/tagout, no insulated PPE). On §200, argue lack of notice on the premises track or no supervisory control on the means-and-methods track, and point to a third party or the utility for the line.

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 Electrocution Accident Claim

Nieves v. Five Boro Air Conditioning, 93 NY2d 914 (1999)

§240(1) protects against a narrow class of gravity hazards and does not reach a pure electric shock.

Cutaia v. Board of Managers of 160/170 Varick Street, 38 NY3d 1037 (2022)

Where a shock causes a fall from a ladder, whether the §240 hazard or the shock caused the injury is a triable question.

Frequently Asked Questions: Electrocution Accidents in Suffolk County

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Electrocution Accidents in Other Areas of New York

Other Construction Accidents in Suffolk 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.

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