Injured in the Gulf of Mexico - What Law Applies?

As the price of oil increases, the demands for oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, both in shallow water and deeper water, will only increase.  So will the demand for oil workers willing to work in often harsh and remote locations in the Gulf of Mexico and beyond.

Recently, in fact, there has been talk in the United States Congress about opening up more areas in the Gulf of Mexico for oil exploration and drilling purposes.

Unfortunately, the end result of more workers in the Gulf of Mexico, and more companies rushing to get oil out of remote and often dangerous places in the Gulf of Mexico is more injured workers and more workplace deaths.

As a law firm that represents workers injured in the Gulf of Mexico, we are often asked by the workers or other attorneys what law applies to these cases.

The answer, unfortunately, is not straightforward.  In fact, if a worker is injured or killed in the Gulf of Mexico, there could be four or five different laws that may apply to the case.  And the law may change depending on what the worker was doing at the time.

The worker may be entitled to recovery under the Jones Act.  Or the injured worker may be a Longshoreman entitled to recover under the Longshore & Harbor Worker's Compensation Act.

Or, the injured worker may be entitled to a recover under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act. 

In a wrongful death case, the Death on the High Seas Act (DOSHA) may govern the case.

The bottom line is that you need an experienced maritime attorney if you are injured in the Gulf of Mexico, because evaluating the right law and the right venue may make all the difference in the world in whether you obtain a fair, reasonable settlement, a small settlement, or even no settlement at all.

Have you been, or do you know, someone who has been hurt in the Gulf of Mexico? 

If so, we would be interested in hearing your experience with the legal system and whether your lawyer did a good job for you.

Want to know more about maritime injury cases? 

We strive to provide the best, most professional, and most effective representation to workers in the offshore industry. 

If you want to know more about offshore injury claims, please take a moment to read the following articles:

1.  How to hire the best lawyer for your Jones Act or offshore injury case

2.  What is the Jones Act?

3.  What is a Longshoreman and What Are Their Legal Rights When Injured?

4.  The difference between the Jones Act and the Longshore & Harbor Worker's Compensation Act

5.  The Truth About Offshore Injury Claims.

6.  What Should You Do If You Are Injured Offshore

7.  What you should know if you were hurt offshore and your employer is giving you a hard time

8.  Should I give my employer or the insurance company a "recorded statement?"

9.  Do I need to hire a lawyer for my Jones Act or offshore injury claim?

10.  What happens when you file a Jones Act lawsuit.

11.  6 Critical Things you must know if you are injured at sea

12. The Secrets Your Employer May Not Want You To Know If You Are Injured Offshore.









Construction workers and construction site injuries continue to be a major problem in Houston and Texas

Construction Workers Suffer from Workplace Injuries

Construction workers face numerous dangers on the roads, and every year well over a thousand workers are killed doing their job on America’s highways.  As a driver, you probably see road construction every day but you probably don’t stop to think about the risk that the workers face just doing their jobs. 

On the job injuries are a serious issue for Texas workers, and none more so than construction workers.  Nationwide in 2006 – the last year for which statistics are available from the US Department of Labor, there were 4,085,400 workplace incidents, which resulted in 5,840 deaths.  In Texas alone, 486 workers were killed in workplace related accidents in Texas.  The majority of Texas fatalities, 202, occurred in transportation related incidents.

The construction and maintenance of Texas roads and highways is essential, and construction crews work day and night to keep up with the demands of the job. 

Construction workers face unique dangers every time they arrive at the job site, including speeding cars, inattentive drivers, intoxicated drivers, and of course dangers from the work itself.  Problems with scaffolds, ladders, excavation and heavy equipment are not uncommon.  As a result, workers face injuries like severe burns, poisoning, electrocution, brain injuries, spinal cord injuries, dismemberment, and more. 

Can you imagine what it would be like if you went to work every day in that kind of environment?

Construction Workers: Dying for a Job

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, fatal highway accidents account for one in four fatal work injuries.  While many workers are struck by passing vehicles, on-site construction accidents are common as well. 

Construction work is inherently dangerous, but injury and fatality rates can be reduced if managers, supervisors, and workers adhere strictly to safety regulations.  Unfortunately, the lack of staff at the Texas Department of Labor means that workers – especially those outside of major metropolitan areas – are more than likely working on job sites where workplace regulations are neither enforced nor inspected by officials.

For every construction worker killed on the job, hundreds more are injured – some so badly that they are unable to work and support their families.  In fact, construction workers miss an average of ten days of work after an on the job accident. 


This is the second highest rate among all injured workers.  Not only are injuries a problem for workers at construction sites, but if a worker does get hurt, they have to ask the question – do I really want to report this injury to my employer?

To Report an Injury… or Not?

Even minor injuries can be a cause for concern when you depend on the well-being of your body for your livelihood.  A simple sprain or strain, which may seem like a minor injury at the time, can worsen as a worker continues on the job.  Despite the risk of a worsening injury, many workers will decide to not report a seemingly minor injury as they fear loosing their position on the crew or loosing wages. 

Unfortunately, in an attempt to save their jobs and income, not taking care of a minor injury makes re-injury very likely.  Of course, if an injury is not reported, a worker cannot receive compensation.  Because of this, some experts believe the number of reported work-related injuries is much lower than it is in reality, and leads to more serious injuries down the road.

Even if an injured worker does report an accident to their employer, they may not be granted the time off they need to rest and recover properly.  Some workers feel pressured into returning to work before they are fully healed, which again can lead to more serious injuries in the future.

In addition, if an injury is not reported immediately, the employer’s insurance company may refuse to cover the injury as an on-the-job incident, which means the injured worker is forced to either forfeit their income and recover on their own time, or keep working with a painful injury.

With the deck stacked against them in so many ways, it is a wonder that construction companies can find people willing to do this kind of dangerous work.  In addition, the loss of experienced construction workers in the coming years due to the retirement of many baby boomers is only going to make it more difficult to find skilled workers.

What to do if you are injured on the job

If you are injured on the job, the first thing you should is let your immediate supervisor know that you have been injured, and that your injury is a result of the work you are performing. 

If you belong to a union, make sure you notify your union representative as well that you’ve been injured on the job.  If at all possible, write down the details of your accident so that you have a record of everything that happened, and you don’t have to rely on your memory or the recollections of others.  What you are trying to avoid is people who “forget” about your injury and neglect to record it in an injury log as required by OSHA.

It is also important that you seek prompt medical treatment for your injury.  This is not the time to “suck it up” or try to be a hero.  Living with a painful injury does not make you stronger; in fact it can lead to more problems and could eventually derail your ability to work in the construction field.

If your injuries are serious or if you think that you aren’t being treated fairly by your employer or your supervisor, don’t hesitate to contact an attorney who specializes in workplace injury litigation.  You should not have to lose your job, your income, or your dignity because of an accident on the job.

If you have been injured on the job then you deserve time off to heal.  However, your employer might not be willing to give you the time and pay you need after an on the job accident to get better.  They may deny that you were hurt on the job or dispute the severity of the injury.  In this case you need an attorney who knows your rights and will fight to get you get proper compensation for your injuries. 

Want to read more about Texas accident and injury law? 

Please take a moment to read the following articles:

1.  How to select a Houston lawyer for you injury or accident case

2.  Common misconceptions in Houston truck accident cases

3.  Five things that could wreck your Houston car or truck accident case

4.  The insurance company wants me to give a statement - what should I do?

5.  How to beat the insurance companies at their own game - ask these 5 questions

6.  Do I need a lawyer for my Houston car or truck accident case?

7.  What to do immediately if you are involved in a Houston car or truck accident

The Forgotten Child - Kids too big for safety seats and too small for adults seats face a high injury risk

Safety seats and modern vehicles are supposed to protect our children in foreseeable, survivable car or truck crashes.

Safety experts and auto manufacterers have long known that a lack of crash protection exists for children between the ages of 4 and 8.  Most kids in this age group are too big for their child safety seat and too small for the seat belt restraints in the vehicle, which were likely designed for adults.

Automakers say that children who are 12 and under should ride in a vehicle’s rear seats.  The outside rear seats of domestic vehicles made in the last decade are equipped with combination lap/shoulder belts. Passengers seated in the middle of a rear bench seat are usually secured by a two-point lap belt. Unfortunately, few of these restraints are designed to accommodate an occupant shorter than 57 inches and weighing less than 80 pounds.3 The average six-year-old child—who is right in the middle of the “forgotten child” age range—stands only 47 inches high and weighs merely 52 pounds.

Manufacturers concede that injuries and deaths attributable to the safety gap have reached unacceptable proportions. According to industry estimates, 500 children are killed every year, and thousands more are seriously injured, due to a lack of proper belt usage.  Many of these children were killed while wearing safety belts.  At a recent trade show, a former chief executive officer of Ford Motor Co. told colleagues that “these are preventable tragedies and urgent action is needed” to close the safety gap.

Studies demonstrate that every 90 seconds a child is killed or injured in a motor vehicle crash. During the 1990s, children between the ages of four and eight were dying in crashes at a rate of about 16 per week.

This is unacceptable in our country.  At our law firm, we see far too many grieving parents who have either lost a young child in a car wreck or had a child badly injured in the wreck because the seat belt system or car seat or booster seat did not protect them properly.

And the sad thing is, the automakers and child seat manufacturers could easily and cheaply prevent many of these injuries and death to children but are not doing so!

Our firm has written an article on this issue.  To read more about the dangers for the "forgotten child," please please visit our main website at www.vbattorneys.com or click here to read the article.






 

Between 1982 and 1998, there was a 23 percent increase in automotive fatalities among children aged five to nine.9 In 2000, 2,343 children under 15 were killed, and more than 291,000 were injured in motor vehicle crashes.10

Manufacturers would have the public believe that the best way to prevent these tragedies is through the use of aftermarket child safety seats. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), placing a child in an age-appropriate safety seat will reduce a child’s risk of dying in a crash by as much as two-thirds.11

Parents are restraining children four and under in child safety seats. The usage rate of safety seats for children under one year old is 95 percent; the rate for children between ages one and four is 91 percent.12 But according to recent studies, the usage rate for children in the safety gap is substantially lower—10 percent.13

The National Transportation Safety Board and NHTSA recommend that children who outgrow child safety seats be placed in “booster seats” until they are large enough for adult-size lap and shoulder belts.14 A well-designed booster seat positions a child so that the three-point shoulder and lap belts fit better.

However, less than 10 percent of children between the ages of four and eight use booster seats.15 This is probably due, in part, to the lack of consensus among experts concerning which types of seats are appropriate for children of different ages and sizes.

For example, NHTSA recommends that children who have outgrown child safety seats be restrained in booster seats until they are at least eight years old, unless they are 49 inches tall.16 On the other hand, a study conducted by the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, State Farm Insurance Co., and the University of Pennsylvania suggests that parents should keep children in booster seats until they are at least eight years old, weigh 80 pounds, and are 58 inches tall.17 In light of this conflicting information, how are parents supposed to determine whether their child should be using a booster seat?

This confusion is exacerbated by manufacturers’ failure to develop their own booster seats. Not every seat works well in every vehicle. Obviously, auto manufacturers are in the best position to determine which types of booster seats are best suited for the wide range of vehicles they build. But they neither build booster seats nor adequately test aftermarket seats to determine which ones can be used safely with their vehicles’ rear seat-belt restraint systems. As a result, parents are denied important information regarding the proper fit of booster seat, child, and vehicle.

Understanding the injuries

In a collision, the seat belt is supposed to slow down the occupant with the vehicle and spread the forces of the collision to the strong bones of the body.18 Proper belt fit and good belt geometry are important in maximizing protection.19

The auto industry has long been aware of the dangers associated with placing children in restraints designed for adults. These dangers result in three types of injuries: submarining injuries to the spine and abdomen; fulcrum injuries to the cervical spine; and injuries associated with partial or full ejection.

Submarining injuries. The lap portion of a properly fitting seat belt should fit snugly below the hips.20 In a crash, the lap belt should couple the occupant to the vehicle and provide restraint by transferring force to the pelvic bones.21 Submarining occurs when a passenger’s pelvis and buttocks slide down and forward during a collision, allowing the lap belt to slip up to the abdomen.22 Submarining can cause severe intra-abdominal injuries and spinal cord trauma.23

Children between four and eight are particularly vulnerable to this type of injury. The lap and shoulder belt geometry is not well suited to their stature. They tend to slouch down in their seats because their legs do not hang comfortably over the edge of the seat cushion.24 Consequently, the lap belt lies above the child’s pelvis and can easily slide up to the abdomen during a crash.25

Fulcrum injuries. The shoulder harness of a rear seat lap/shoulder belt typically passes diagonally across an adult’s outside shoulder, over the sternum, and down to the inside hip where it connects with the lap belt and fastens into the seat belt buckle.26 In the case of a child, the typical shoulder harness crosses in front of the child’s face or throat.27

A belt in this position creates an artificial fulcrum that, during an accident, can stretch the upper spine past the breaking point, resulting in paralysis or death.28 If the torso belt is not used (either because the vehicle is not equipped with it or because it is placed behind the child’s back for a more comfortable fit), the fulcrum point is at the waist. This can cause severe head injuries when the force of an impact throws the child’s head forward onto his or her knees or the back of the front seat.29

Full or partial ejection injuries. Some seat belts are so poorly designed that even belted children can be thrown completely out of a vehicle. Such was the case in Johnston v. Ford Motor Co.30 In that case, five-year-old Cody Johnston was riding as a front-seat passenger while his mother was driving the family’s Ford Ranger on an interstate. Both Cody and his mother were wearing three-point lap/shoulder belts.31

Another vehicle collided with the Ranger, causing it to roll over. Cody was thrown from the car and killed. The investigating officer noted in the police report that Cody was not big enough for the seat belt and that the belt was still buckled after the car came to rest.

Poor seat-belt design can also cause partial ejection.32 Torso rollout—when the torso of a child completely escapes or rolls out of the shoulder harness—is a type of partial ejection that can occur in oblique crashes and rollovers.33 Children who roll out of a shoulder belt often sustain severe intra-abdominal injuries and lumbar or cervical spinal cord injuries, often resulting in paralysis.34

Establishing liability

As with any crashworthiness case, one brought on behalf of a child injured by improperly fitting, or absent, safety belts is based on the claim that the vehicle was defectively designed because it failed to provide adequate occupant protection during a crash.

In addition to proving that a product is unreasonably dangerous as designed, plaintiffs in many jurisdictions are required to assert a design defect claim to prove the existence of a safer alternative design. A safer alternative design in safety gap cases is the integrated child seat. These are seats with harnesses built into the cushion of a vehicle’s rear seats. They have been available in some European vehicles since the late1980s. Child safety advocates, manufacturers, and safety experts agree that an integrated child seat with a five-point harness is the safest form of child restraint available.35

Most jurisdictions also require plaintiffs to prove that a proposed safer alternative design is economically and technologically feasible. In the United States, Chrysler first introduced five-point integrated child seats in the U.S. market by placing them in its minivans in the 1992 model year. Other manufacturers have also offered the seats, as optional equipment on select model vehicles.

Accordingly, the auto manufacturers’ own conduct proves the technological and economic feasibility of this safer alternative design. Moreover, there is no real functional or cosmetic problem associated with integrated child seats; the seat is virtually indistinguishable from a normal bench seat when the safety seat is not in use.

Plaintiff attorneys also should consider advancing a marketing-defect claim. This concerns the seller’s failure to adequately warn or instruct consumers on the safe use of the product. Manufacturers recognize that nearly 80 percent of parents do not use the proper safety device for their four- to eight-year-old children; automakers clearly have knowledge of the danger. Yet manuals and notices that accompany many vehicles do not warn parents of the danger associated with having children wear seat belts designed for adults.

Many owner’s manuals may suggest that booster seats be used for children who weigh 40 to 80 pounds, but they are unlikely to contain any meaningful instruction on which ones work best with the vehicle’s seat belts. These vehicles therefore lack adequate instructions for safe use by children in the safety gap.

Making the case

As soon as a potential client contacts you, take immediate steps to preserve the evidence. The vehicle should be secured in its postcrash condition. Nothing should be disassembled or removed from it without notice to the defendants.

You should inspect the seat belt, review the child’s medical records, and interview witnesses to determine if and how the child was wearing the belt. A qualified accident-reconstruction expert should inspect, measure, and photograph the crash scene and any other vehicles involved.

Retain a biomechanical engineer or qualified medical expert to review the medical records, X-rays, and other imaging studies to determine whether the child’s injuries were caused by a belt’s poor fit and geometry. After an initial review, consult an expert with knowledge of automobile design to analyze the design defect claims.

Obtain documentation from the manufacturer relating to the design and marketing issues raised in the case. Many of these materials have been disseminated publicly or uncovered in earlier litigation, so you may already have many of the relevant documents even before filing the case.

Anticipate certain defenses. First, the automaker may deny that a safety gap exists. This defense is easily refuted by statistical information compiled by independent third parties like the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen and by the auto industry’s own statements acknowledging the safety gap.

Second, the manufacturer may blame the child’s parents for not using a booster seat. To counter this, produce evidence showing there is no consensus on the appropriate use of booster seats. Properly qualified design and biomechanical experts can explain why the use of a booster seat may not have prevented the injuries sustained in a particular crash.

Finally, the manufacturer almost certainly will argue that because its rear-seat restraint system meets Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards, it is not defective. However, compliance with government standards does not establish as a matter of law that the design is not defective. Explain to the jury that these are minimum standards and that nothing prevents manufacturers from exceeding these minimum standards in the interests of children.

Auto manufacturers have a duty to design and market cars that provide consumers of all ages with a reasonable level of protection in the event of a crash. While seat belts may provide protection for many adults, a gap in crash protection exists for children between four and eight years old. Successfully pursuing cases for the forgotten children in this age group should allow the injured to obtain justice and cause auto manufacturers to improve the safety of their cars.

Notes
1. Martha W. Bidez & Stephen R. Syson, Kinematics, Injury Mechanisms, and Design Considerations for Older Children in Adult Torso Belts, SAE 2001-01-0173, in BIOMECHANICS RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT (Soc’y Auto. Eng’rs 2001); Richard Stalnaker, Inconsistencies in State Laws and Federal Regulations Regarding Child Restraint Use in Automobiles, SAE 933087, in CHILD OCCUPANT PROTECTION 51 (Soc’y Auto. Eng’rs 1993).
2. Jacques Nasser, Former Chief Executive Officer, Ford Motor Co., Address at the New York International Auto Show (Apr. 2000).
3.Id.
4. See FORD MOTOR CO., BOOST AMERICA! RAISING KIDS WITH SAFETY IN MIND, available at www.actsinc.org/childpassengersafety.html (last visited Sept. 27, 2002).
5. See generally AUTO. COALITION FOR TRAFFIC SAFETY, INC., CHILD PASSENGER SAFETY, at www.actsinc.org/childpassengersafety.html (last visited Sept. 27, 2002).
6.See Nasser, supra note 2.
7.See S. REP. NO. 107-137 (2002).
8.Id.
9.Id.
10.Id.
11. NAT’L HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMIN., BUYING A SAFER CAR FOR CHILD PASSENGERS (2001), available at www.nhtsa.dot.gov/People/ Injury/ChildPS/SaferCar2001/contents.html (last visited Sept. 27, 2002).
12. NAT’L HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMIN., TRAFFIC SAFETY FACTS 2000—CHILDREN 5 (2000), available at www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/pdf/nrd-30/ NCSA/TSF2000/2000chdfacts.pdf (last visited Sept. 27, 2002).
13. Press Release, Automotive Coalition for Traffic Safety, Blue Ribbon Panel II Announces Recommendations to Improve Child Passenger Safety (Mar. 15, 1999), available at www.actsinc.org/ whatsnew_5.html (last visited Sept. 27, 2002).
14.See S. REP. NO. 107-137, supra note 7.
15.Id.
16.See S. REP. NO. 107-137, supra note 7.
17. PARTNERS FOR CHILD PASSENGER SAFETY PROJECT, PARTNERS INTERIM REPORT (1997), available at www.chop.edu/download/ Interim_report.pdf.
18.Bidez & Syson, supra note 1.
19.Id.
20.Bidez & Syson, supra note 1.
21. David L. Perry, A Primer on Crashworthiness for the Non-Crashworthiness Lawyer (Nov. 3, 2001), available at www.crashworthinesscases.com/ crashworthinessIntro.html.
22.See S. REP. NO. 107-137, supra note 7.
23.Id.
24.Id.
25.Id.
26.Bidez & Syson, supra note 1.
27.Id.
28.Id.
29.Id.
30.No. 010902023 PI (Utah, Salt Lake County Dist. Ct. June 26, 2002).
31.See Utah Highway Patrol Accident Report (Nov. 8, 1999).
32.Bidez & Syson, supra note 1.
33.Id.
34.Id.
35.FORD MOTOR CO., INTEGRATED CHILD RESTRAINT STRATEGY STATUS REPORT (1995).

Traysol Linked to 1000 Deaths Per Month

60 minutes had a chilling expose a few weeks ago on the Bayer drug Trasylol.

The broadcast told the story of Joseph Radone.  Mr. Radone had heart surgery.  The risk asociated with the surgery was around five percent.  Mr. Radone would be home in a week.

After the surgery, the doctors told the family about "complications" that had occurred.  The doctors told the Joe's wife and daugther that Traysol was responsible for the complications.

Only ten days after the surgery, the New England Journal of Medicine published a study on Trasylol.  According to to the study, there was an "association" between Trasylol and kidney failure and Traysol increased the risk of death in patients given the drug.

As far back as the 1980s, German researchers were concerned with the drug.  In 1992, in one small study, almost 75% of patients given Trasylol had kidney problems afterwards.

After the New England Journal of Medicine study came out, the FDA held and advisory meeting to determine the accuracy of the study. 

At the hearing, Bayer representatives hid previous studies from the FDA.

In 2007, a Canadian study was stopped because too many patients in the study were dying.

After the Canadian study, German authorities banned Trasylol and Bayer temporarily stopped selling the drug.

After 19 operations including having his eyes sewn shut, removing his gall bladder, and having his legs amputated, Joe Randone died.

What do you think about the 60 minutes story?  Bayer's conduct?  Whether the Randone family should be allowed to file a lawsuit against Bayer?

Do you think the 1000s of other patients and families who were harmed by Trasylol should obtain some sort of justice from Bayer for the effects of its drug?

We welcome your comments.

Has the car you're driving been recalled?

Have you been paying attention to all the recalls in the news lately?  Did you know that auto recalls were up 30% in 2007 compared with 2006?

Ford led the pack with over 5.5 million recalls last year, 3.8 million of which were due to a faulty cruise control switch.  Next in line was DaimlerChrysler with 1.47 million recalls, and Volkswagen clocked in with 1.4 million.

If you’re concerned about the safety of the vehicle that you’re driving, then do yourself a favor and check out these websites.  Safecar.gov is maintained by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and allows you to search for recall information, view current complaints against manufacturers, or file a complaint yourself.

You can also check the Recalls.gov website, an online portal that provides access to six federal agencies that maintain recall information.  From this site you can access the NHTSA recall data

Were you affected by the record recalls last year?  What do you think that manufacturers can do about it?  Leave us a comment, and then check out our articles about the 2007 auto recalls and about product recalls in general.