
An agreement of $ 23.5 million has been reached with the construction of Turner and the concrete concrete subcontractor of death last year of a 27 -year -old building engineer who fell 145 feet from the scaffolding on a $ 815 million cancer pavilion project in medical center at the University of Chicago.
The case was resolved by the family of David O’Donnell, who had been performing poll and design operations on June 6, 2024 for the installation of structural steel core walls when a wind streak, registered at 48 mph according to the United States Occupational Health Administration, caused a high platform to separate and move away from a wall wall.
Another worker, Ironworker’s traveler Jeffrey Spyrka, was critical when 10 stories fell in a space between the main wall and the platform. He has also sued Turner, the general contractor of the project, and Lombard, concrete concrete based on Ill. Spyrka was soldering structural steel forceps to steel inlays on the core wall when the accident occurred. The project is located in the Hyde Park district of the city.
Lou Cairo, a GWC injury lawyer lawyer, represents the O’Donnell and Spyrka family, stated that the gust of the wind was weaker than the Federal Security Agency reported.
“Preliminary research revealed severe deficiencies in the scaffolding system, designed to support winds of up to 85 mph, but failed under a 44 mph wind burst,” the Cairo said in a statement. “The structural weaknesses, the improper materials and the lack of appropriate connections in a critical corner contributed to the collapse.”
Cairo said that “an additional review indicated a systemic failure in both the construction inspection protocols and the scaffolding that suggest the responsibility that exceeded ordinary negligence. GWC was preparing to seek punitive damage if the case had proceeded to court.”
Christopher McFadden, a Turner spokesman, said in a statement: “We extend our deepest sympathy to the O’Donnell family. His loss is a disgusting tragedy. Out of respect for his privacy, we will not comment anymore.”
Osha fined $ 14,518 for the accident, saying “the frontal edge of all platforms [a self-rising, climbing concrete formwork system platform] It was not 14 inches or less of the face of the work, and no guard rails were erected along the frontal edge and/or no personal fall detention systems “on the platform.
The agency fined the adjustable concrete of $ 13,828, also citing the signature for not having a stairs railing consisting of a higher railway and railway on each side of each scaffold scale, which Osha says that project employees expose to dangers associated with falls.
O’Donnell was employed by Hi-Tech Stake-out Inc., Oak Forest, Ill. Nor was he named in demand.
Spyrka’s businessman is New Horizon Steel LLC, who was not appointed to the lawsuit either and was not fined or quoted for infractions related to the accident.
The adjustable concrete forms did not respond to a comment request. There is a separate lawsuit in the Cook County Circuit Court involved in Spryka and nine iron workers involved in the incident.
Cairo, who also represented two other injured workers, said that most of his complaints claim an infection due to negligence due to emotional distress. “Two of my customers were very close when David O’Donnell fell,” he said. “One was a few inches from falling into the hole with him.”
He said that some workers also suffered bruises and abrasions when they jumped back to the core of the building as the scaffold fell. Spyrka has suffered 15 surgeries since the accident, he said.
