Scaffolding on construction sites in Ulster County must comply with New York State Labor Law Section 240 (the Scaffold Law) and OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart L. Local building departments in towns like Kingston, New Paltz, and Saugerties inspect scaffold setups during permitted construction. Sidewalk sheds are required when work occurs above pedestrian routes in village centers.
New York Labor Law §240 imposes absolute liability on owners and contractors for gravity-related injuries caused by inadequate scaffolding, hoists, ladders, and other elevation devices. Labor Law §241(6) requires compliance with Industrial Code Rule 23 (12 NYCRR Part 23), which sets detailed scaffold construction, guardrail, planking, and fall-protection standards. Scaffolds over 40 feet require design by a licensed professional engineer. OSHA 29 CFR 1926.451 mandates guardrails at 10+ feet, fully planked platforms, and competent-person daily inspections. Kingston, New Paltz, Saugerties, and Woodstock building departments verify scaffold safety during permitted framing, roofing, and masonry work. Sidewalk sheds with 8-foot vertical clearance are required in Uptown Kingston and the Rondout when overhead work occurs above public sidewalks. Scaffolds on NYS DOT highway rights-of-way (Route 9W, 28, 299) require separate work-zone permits with MUTCD-compliant signage.
NY Labor Law §240 creates absolute civil liability for falls — owners and contractors cannot use worker negligence as a defense. Industrial Code violations carry NYS DOL fines up to $10,000. OSHA scaffold citations range from $16,131 (serious) to $161,323 (willful/repeat) per violation. Local stop-work orders halt projects until corrections are verified.
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Ulster County, NY
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