Albany Times Union

Renewed calls

Mcdonald hoping to use budget process to repeal statute

- By Edward Mckinley Albany

Assemblyma­n hopes to use budget process to repeal Scaffold Law./

Dozens of business advocacy and local government groups penned a letter to Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo on Tuesday calling for him to back a repeal of a state law, on the books since the 1800s, that puts the blame for workplace accidents solely on the shoulders of the business, regardless of the worker’s relative responsibi­lity for their own injury.

The statute, known as the Scaffold Law, holds employers and building owners to an “absolute liability ” standard whenever a worker is injured or killed in an accident involving a fall from an elevated surface. New York is the only state in the country with such a law.

Proponents of the law, such as labor unions and personal injury lawyers, say it is essential to keeping workers safe.

“In light of several years in a row now of record-high constructi­on deaths, our concern is that repealing or reforming laws that protect workers could provide opportunit­ies

for bad actors to lower the standard for safety on jobs,” said Anthony Fresina, business manager for Local 190 of the Laborers’ Union. “Our priority is, and always will be, the health and safety of our members and all workers within the constructi­on industry.”

Critics of the law note that it was passed before the developmen­t of federal workplace safety standards, and say it is now outdated. They point to

what they characteri­ze as inflated insurance premiums for constructi­on projects in the state and say that it’s common sense that if a judge finds a worker to be 2 percent responsibl­e for their own injury, their payout in an injury claim should be 2 percent less. They also say there’s no evidence the law actually leads to safer workplaces, since employees don’t have a legal incentive to be responsibl­e for their own safety.

The letter, signed by 44 groups such as the New York Conference of Mayors, the Farm Bureau, constructi­on and builders groups and the Capital Region Chamber of Commerce, asks Cuomo to include a repeal of the Scaffold Law as part of his budget proposal for the state’s next fiscal year. With the state facing a multibilli­on-dollar budget calamity as a result of COVID -19, this would be one way to make each dollar stretch a bit further, the letter says.

“We cannot let special interests hold our state and municipal budgets hostage any longer,” the letter says. “We stand behind you and urge you to finally fix this law and bring New York into the 21st Century and help us recover and heal from this terrible pandemic.”

Tom O’connor, vice president for government­al affairs for the Capital Region Chamber of Commerce, said changing the law would save New York taxpayers $700 million and private businesses as much as $1.4 billion.

“If that’s going to be a savings for school districts, local government­s and the private sectors, you’re addressing part of your fiscal crisis — and you’re also promoting econom

ic growth, both of which the state absolutely needs right now,” he said.

Assemblyma­n John Mcdonald, D -Cohoes, introduced the standalone bill to repeal this law. He described the fight to ensure passage as “an uphill battle” due to the political influence of trial lawyers and labor unions with the Democratic party.

“If it’s ever going to happen, it’s going to hap

pen in the budget process, no doubt about it,” he said. It’s at that time of the legislativ­e calendar when bulky omnibus legislatio­n can be passed and a sticky political issue like the Scaffold Act could squeak through.

Mcdonald’s pitch for the bill is simple: The Scaffold Law adds as much as 7 percent to constructi­on costs that other states don’t have, which is particular­ly hard on schools and local government­s trying to pay for constructi­on projects, and there’s not much evidence

it actually makes New York a safer place for constructi­on workers. The last assertion is backed up by a peer-reviewed study of the Scaffold Law by the national Transporta­tion Research Board.

“I would never want to promote something that would make the workplace more unsafe, but there’s been no evidence as to that,” Mcdonald said. “I would rather invest in people and projects than in out-of-state insurance companies.”

The lawmaker also said high insurance costs in

New York due to the Scaffold Law make it artificial­ly difficult for small, minority-owned businesses to make bids and break into the industry.

“The labor community would tell you that it’s unfair that people may die and they ’re not being compensate­d, and I get that,” Mcdonald said. “This is not meant to penalize the injured worker, but if somebody makes a mistake that contribute­s to the accident then that needs to be taken into account in the fuller picture.”

 ?? Lori Van Buren / Albany Times Union ?? A welder is seen on top of a steel frame for the constructi­on of a bank on July 15 in Albany. Assemblyma­n John Mcdonald introduced a bill to repeal the statute known as the Scaffold Law. The law has been on the state books since the 1800s.
Lori Van Buren / Albany Times Union A welder is seen on top of a steel frame for the constructi­on of a bank on July 15 in Albany. Assemblyma­n John Mcdonald introduced a bill to repeal the statute known as the Scaffold Law. The law has been on the state books since the 1800s.

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