
Crane Accidents Lawyer in Oneida County, NY
Crane Accidents at a Oneida County construction site? NY Labor Law §240(1) and §241(6) may entitle you to full compensation. Free case review — (888) 702-1581.
Oneida County is in the middle of its most significant construction period in decades, anchored by the $480 million Mohawk Valley Health System Wynn Hospital — a new downtown Utica medical tower that became the city's largest-ever construction project. The Oneida Indian Nation's Turning Stone Resort Casino in Verona continues to expand with new hotel towers, event venues, and golf facilities under tribal construction contracts. SUNY Polytechnic Institute's Utica campus has attracted semiconductor-sector vendors to the county's Marcy Nanotechnology Campus, and the Rome Sentinel complex and nearby Griffiss Business and Technology Park generate consistent commercial construction demand.
Crane Accidents in Oneida County — What the Law Says
Crane accidents in New York construction are catastrophic events that frequently result in death or permanent disability. When a suspended load falls or a crane collapses, multiple parties — the owner, general contractor, and crane operator — may face liability.
In Oneida County, crane accidents cases most often arise under §240(1) and §241(6). When a crane drops a load and injures a worker below, Labor Law §240(1) applies because the load was suspended at elevation and gravity caused the harm. For crane operational failures not involving a falling load — such as a worker being struck by a swinging boom — §241(6) applies through Industrial Code violations in 12 NYCRR 23-8.1 (mobile cranes) and 23-8.2 (tower cranes), which impose detailed requirements for inspection, certification, load limits, and operator qualifications. OSHA's 29 CFR 1926.1400 subpart CC sets additional federal standards and violations can bolster negligence claims against the crane owner or operator.
Settlements in New York crane accidents cases typically range from $500,000 to $10,000,000+ depending on injury severity, number of defendants, and available insurance. Cases involving permanent disability or wrongful death are at the top end of that range.
Appeals in Oneida County cases go to the Appellate Division, 4th Department, which has well-developed §240 and §241(6) case law that your attorney will use to frame your claim.
Settlement Range
Typical NY settlement range for crane accidents cases
NY Labor Law §240 and §241 — What Every Worker in Oneida County Should Know
The Mohawk Valley corridor is seeing renewed investment after decades of industrial decline. New construction means new §240 exposure for property owners and general contractors.
New York Labor Law §240(1), known as the Scaffold Law, imposes strict liability on property owners and general contractors when a worker is injured due to a gravity-related hazard — a fall from scaffolding, a ladder collapse, a falling object. Strict liability means the owner's negligence does not need to be proved. If the safety device failed to provide proper protection, liability attaches.
§241(6) adds a parallel claim: any violation of the NY Industrial Code (12 NYCRR Part 23) that causes injury is also actionable. These two statutes together give injured construction workers in Oneida County unusually strong legal footing compared to workers in any other state.
Workers' compensation is not your only option. §240 and §241(6) claims are separate civil lawsuits — you can pursue both simultaneously, and a third-party lawsuit typically produces substantially higher recoveries than comp alone.
Filing Your Claim: Supreme Court, Oneida County
Construction accident lawsuits in Oneida County are generally filed in the Supreme Court, Oneida County, located at 200 Elizabeth Street, Utica NY 13501. The court is part of New York's Appellate Division, 4th Department — the appellate body that reviews trial court decisions in Oneida County cases. Understanding the appellate division matters because different departments have developed slightly different interpretations of §240's scope over decades of case law.
Deadlines matter. Under CPLR §214, you have three years from the date of injury to file a personal injury claim. However, the statute of limitations for wrongful death is two years, and claims against government entities may require a Notice of Claim filed within 90 days. Do not wait.
If you were treated after your accident at Mohawk Valley Health System — Wynn Hospital or another trauma center, your medical records will form a core part of your damages evidence. Preserving those records early, along with incident reports, OSHA logs, and witness contact information, protects your case.
Supreme Court, Oneida County
200 Elizabeth Street, Utica NY 13501
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Call (888) 702-1581 for a free case review. We handle §240 and §241 claims throughout Oneida County and all of New York state. No fee unless we win.