April 2011 Archives

April 23, 2011

Binghamton New York Construction Accident Involves Time Warner Cable and Excavator: No Personal Injuries

New York excavator accident rollover lawyer.jpg"More than 400 construction accidents occur every day," said Syracuse work injury lawyer Anthony S. Bottar, Esq., of Bottar Leone, PLLC. "Aggressive deadlines and tight budgets often lead general contractors and property owners to cut corners. Unfortunately, many of these accidents are preventable."

Last Wednesday, a Binghamton construction accident led to traffic delays on the Vestal parkway, near the main entrance to Binghamton University. At or about 7:30 a.m., a construction worker was driving an excavator when the arm of the machine struck and severed a utility pole. The pole fell to the ground and downed a Time Warner Cable fiber optic line. Fortunately, no one was injured.

This was not the case with the June 3, 2010 Binghamton scaffolding collapse discussed in our entry titled Syracuse Work Injury Lawyer Consulted On Binghamton New York Construction Accident Liability.

"In this instance, the workers were lucky," said New York personal injury lawyer Michael A. Bottar, Esq. "Not everyone is. We recently represented a man who was strapped to a utility pole when it broke and fell to the ground. His pelvis was crushed in the fall. While we were able to recover $1,700,000.00 for him, he is now permanently, totally disabled. He will never be the same."

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April 3, 2011

Syracuse Traumatic Brain Injury Disabilities To Decrease After New York Concussion Bill

New York concussion mild traumatic brain injury.jpg"Approximately 1.7 million people sustain a traumatic brain injury every year," said Anthony S. Bottar, of Bottar Leone, PLLC, a team of Syracuse personal injury attorneys representing individuals disabled by a concussion or post-concussion syndrome.

According to the CDC, 80% of people with a traumatic brain injury are treated and released by an emergency room. Concussions account for most of those TBIs (75%). "After a TBI, many people appear normal on the outside, yet some people never fully recover. And 3% of TBI victims die - as many as 50,000 people each year," Bottar added.

Most TBIs are caused by falls, followed by car accidents, impacts/collisions (i.e., athletics), and assaults. With advancements in imaging technology, the medical community now acknowledges that a concussion, even a mild concussion, can harm the brain on a cellular level, with devastating consequences. In turn, a Concussion Bill has been introduced. It applies to all school age students, not just student athletes, and provides that "in the event that there is any doubt as to whether a pupil has sustained a concussion, it shall be presumed that he or she has been so injured until proven otherwise." Pupils will be prohibited from participating in school athletic activity until they are concussion symptom-free for 24 hours. The Bill also requires that concussions be reported to the New York State Education Department

Signs and symptoms of a concussion include: confusion, memory loss, headaches, dizziness, balance problems, ringing in the ears, vision problems, nausea, vomiting, slurred speech, poor coordination, fatigue, inappropriate emotions, sleep disturbance, light sensitivity, anxiety, depression, seizures and loss of consciousness.

According to Syracuse.com, Brian Rieger, Ph.D., the director of the Concussion Management Program at Upstate Medical University, stated "the real recommendation is that if you've been symptom free for 24 hours, you can begin the process of getting back to play."