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Trench Collapse in Erie County, NY
Labor Law 240 Claims

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

Trench Collapse in Erie County: What Workers Need to Know

Erie County runs a very_high-volume construction market — 520 active permits and roughly 72 major sites operating at any given time. State data shows about 165 construction injury reports filed annually in Erie. 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 Erie construction worker is hurt in a trench collapse, 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 trench collapse.

520Active Permits
165Annual Injury Reports
11Fatalities (5 Year)
$2M - $10M+Case Value Range

How New York Labor Law Applies to a Trench Collapse in Erie County

The medical profile is asphyxia and crush, not impact — and §241(6), not §240(1), is the dominant theory.

A trench cave-in is the opposite of a fall case. Conventional doctrine holds that laterally collapsing earth is not a §240(1) "falling object," so the dominant theory is Labor Law §241(6) — through the Industrial Code's excavation subpart — and §200, which turns on the general contractor's actual control or notice. There is, however, a genuine and unsettled §240(1) ambiguity: an Appellate Division decision (Rivas) applied §240(1) to a roughly 12-foot trench cave-in, finding a non-de-minimis height differential that required a shoring device. Treat §240 for cave-ins as fact-dependent, with that line as the plaintiff-favorable hook.

A 2026 Court of Appeals decision (Mann v. Mezuyon) held that the Industrial Code's "struck or endangered by excavation equipment" provision is not specific enough to support §241(6), so the claim anchors instead on the sheeting-and-shoring provisions.

How Trench Collapse Happen

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

Unsupported wall shear failure

Soil is held vertical in a trench wall by cohesion and internal friction. When a trench is dug in Type C soil — sandy, granular, or previously disturbed fill — those properties may be near zero. The wall shears from the top and slumps inward as a mass. The typical collapse takes 2 seconds or less, faster than a worker can move. The soil mass — which weighs approximately 100 pounds per cubic foot — pins the worker at the legs and hips and simultaneously compresses the chest, preventing breathing.

Surcharge overloading

Excavated soil, equipment, and materials piled within 2 feet of a trench edge increase the lateral pressure on the wall. As the surcharge weight increases, the wall below its midpoint is pushed inward and fails in a wedge failure — the most common trench-collapse pattern. Workers have no warning because the failure propagates at near-soil-shear-wave speed (faster than sound in air).

Dewatering failure

Water saturates soil and dramatically reduces its cohesion. When a trench dewatering pump fails, or when a nearby water main is struck during digging, the trench walls become near-fluid in minutes. The collapse pattern is a flow failure rather than a shear — the soil flows around and under the worker. This pattern produces the deepest burial and the most difficult rescues.

Where Erie County Cases Are Filed

Erie County Supreme Court

25 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14202

8th Judicial District · Fourth Department

Major Construction Sites in Erie County

Trench Collapse risks are concentrated wherever large projects operate. These are the highest-activity sites in Erie County right now:

Highmark Stadium (Buffalo Bills)

Sports / stadium

$1.4B

Active construction

Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus Expansion

Healthcare / biomedical

$375M

Active phase

One Canalside Mixed-Use Development

Mixed-use

$120M

Active construction

Where Trench Collapse Happen Across Erie County

Trench Collapse risk follows the work, and in Erie County construction concentrates in these areas:

Buffalo Cheektowaga Amherst Tonawanda West Seneca

Trauma Centers Serving Erie County

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

LI

Erie County Medical Center

462 Grider St, Buffalo, NY 14215

Primary Level I trauma center for the Buffalo metro. Handles majority of serious construction accidents in WNY.

Union Locals in Erie County

The primary unions covering Erie County construction workers are: LIUNA Local 210, IBEW Local 41, Carpenters Local 276, Ironworkers Local 6, Operating Engineers Local 17. Full list includes 12 active locals on Erie 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 Trench Collapse

29 CFR 1926.501Fall Protection - General Requirements

6,763 citations in FY2024 nationwide. OSHA citations for this standard on a Erie 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 Erie 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.

Erie County Construction History

Peace Bridge (Buffalo–Fort Erie) (1925–1927) — Built by a joint American-Canadian ironworker team, the Peace Bridge is a defining symbol of Western New York's construction labor tradition and remains one of the most heavily used border crossings in North America.

OSHA Standards That Govern Trench Collapse

29 CFR 1926.652(a)

A protective system — sloping, shoring, or a trench box — is mandatory at 5 feet of depth and deeper.

29 CFR 1926.651(c)

A means of egress within 25 feet of lateral travel in trenches 4 feet deep or more.

29 CFR 1926.651(k)

Daily competent-person inspection for cave-in evidence; more often after rain, vibration, or added load.

NY Industrial Code Subpart 23-4 (Excavations) supplies the §241(6) predicates — most importantly the requirement that a trench 5 feet deep or more with banks steeper than the code's table be sheeted and shored, with daily inspection. After Mann v. Mezuyon (2026), do not lead on the excavation-equipment provision; anchor on the sheeting-and-shoring requirements.

How a Trench Collapse Happens — and the Injuries It Causes

Lethality is by mass, not height. One cubic yard of soil weighs about 3,000 pounds — the weight of a small car. A wall collapses inward from a missing protective system, an undercut bank, vibration, rain, or spoil piled too close to the edge.

Mechanical or compressive asphyxia is the cause of death — the chest cannot expand even with a clear airway. Crush syndrome (rhabdomyolysis leading to hyperkalemia and acute renal failure) means a worker can be extricated alive and conscious and then die hours later. Compartment syndrome, thoracic crush, and suffocation follow. Even brief, partial burial is potentially fatal.

What Drives the Value of a Erie Trench Collapse Case

Typical case value: $2M - $10M+. Disproportionately wrongful-death cases. OSHA often cites cave-ins as willful, because protective systems are inexpensive and the hazard is well known — strong evidence of recklessness that supports punitive exposure.

What the defense will argue: Argue the soil conditions were unpredictable, lean on a daily-inspection record to show a competent person checked the trench, and strategically try to knock out any §240(1) theory so that comparative fault becomes available under §241(6) and §200.

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 Trench Collapse Claim

Misicki v. Caradonna, 12 NY3d 511 (2009)

A §241(6) claim must rest on a concrete, specific Industrial Code command, not a general standard.

Rizzuto v. L.A. Wenger Contracting, 91 NY2d 343 (1998)

§241(6) liability is non-delegable and attaches without proof the owner supervised the work.

Frequently Asked Questions: Trench Collapse in Erie County

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Trench Collapse in Other Areas of New York

Other Construction Accidents in Erie 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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