Construction Safety: Falling pole kills co-worker, benefits may depend on a quick investigation

Steve Lombardi
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Posted by Steve LombardiJuly 29, 2009 6:36 PM

In what can only be described as a tragedy, a construction worker today was killed after a utility pole was knocked over striking and killing him. The utility pole was backed into by a fellow worker operating a Bobcat with a bucket on it. The worker that died was 32 years-old and his fellow worker was 57. The accident occurred at 10:15 a.m., just south of S.W. 26th Street and Watrous Avenue in Des Moines. The younger man was pronounced dead at the hospital.

Someone needs to take photographs of the pole and the accident investigation site. Whoever is in charge of the dependent children needs to hire someone to get in there and photograph the location before the owner removes and destroys the pole. How that pole was seated in the ground may be a very important fact and pictures a sometimes worth a thousand words.

There are several interesting legal points to this story. First, the younger man leaves two young children behind. Hopefully this young man’s employer had workers’ compensation coverage that will pay these children benefits through college or at least through high school (age 18). It’s not unusual that smaller contractors don’t have coverage; that’s not legal, but lawyers see it often in the construction industry.

Second, the dependents of this young man would have a claim for the workers’ compensation benefits and also may have a claim against the owner of the pole. The Des Moines Register article includes a reference to a spokesperson from MidAmerican Energy Co who said the pole was not one of theirs and did not carry electrical lines. Mediacom said they commonly rent poles and Qwest hadn’t yet commented. So who owned that pole? This pole is interesting in that it was caused to fall down when the Bobcat backed into it; a scenario unlikely to normally happen. It should take a lot of pressure to cause a utility pole to fall down. Normally they snap. And that’s the rub, as I like to say, of this case investigation. Why did it fall down so easily?

Which leads me to the third and final point; the case investigation to preserve valuable evidence. I remember driving towards Des Moines on Grand Avenue one day many years ago when I noticed a pole that had been struck by a car. The power company had a truck on location and was in the process of setting up to take the pole down and set it father away from the street. A client lived at that location so I pulled in to talk with him; he was standing on the sidewalk watching. Immediately I took out a camera and began taking photographs, which later were sent to the attorney representing the man whose legs were apparently pinned between the pole and a car bumper in the accident. Had I not taken photographs the pole would have been removed taking with it any chance of knowing what it looked like. It’s important to gather and preserve the key evidence in the case; in this case the pole. Someone needs to take photographs of the pole and the accident investigation site. Whoever is in charge of the dependent children needs to hire someone to get in there and photograph the location before the owner removes and destroys the pole. How that pole was seated in the ground may be a very important fact and pictures a sometimes worth a thousand words.

Owners don’t sit around waiting for injured people to complete their investigation. Owners need to get busy cleaning up the mess to make sure someone else isn’t injured or killed. Justice waits for no one.

So act, don’t sit around wondering. If you know Andrew Clark’s guardian tell them to get some legal advice and quickly; their future may depend upon it.

3 Comments

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M Ewing
Posted by M Ewing
August 04, 2009 8:14 AM

It appears that Mr. Lombardi is only interested in doing what is right as long as it contributes to his welfare. I am a safety professional and can tell anyone who will listen that if you want the truth the last thing you need is lawyers involved in any accident investigation. Never once did he ask what could have been done to prevent this terrible opccurrence.

Timothy SmithInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by Timothy Smith
August 04, 2009 9:00 AM

M Ewing:

I have to disagree. It's been my experience that attorneys for the injured worker are the only ones that can find the truth...

I had a case a few years back where the insurance company [for the employer whose negligence killed an employee on the work site]had an investigator on site immediately following the accident. Within 24 hours, that insurance company investigator [bought and paid for] had pinned the blame on the dead employee through some bizzare analysis that no other subsequent investigator agreed with. If a family wants the truth about what happened, the last thing they REALLY need is an employer's insurance company involved in the investigation. They'll pin it on the employee every time. Find a competent attorney if you want to get to the bottom of what actually happened.

Steve LombardiInjuryBoard Attorney Member
Posted by Steve Lombardi
August 04, 2009 10:36 AM

Mr. Ewing: I disagree with your characterization of what I want or why I might want it. Do you have some connection this company? I was very fair with what the owner's do and why. On the contrary if working people who are unfamiliar with accident investigation of litigation don't appreciate what happens after an accidental death at the workplace, they often times find themselves at a disadvantage later on when it occurs to them they are being mistreated by the insurance company. So I have to wonder what would motivate you to not want a lawyer involved with protecting the dependents right to receive benefits. And the answer is...

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