Ah, summer camp. New friends. New adventures. Swimming, horseback riding, archery, crafts, s’mores around the campfire. What’s not to love? But if your child is heading off to camp this summer, you want to make sure that (s)he’ll be just as safe and healthy there as (s)he is at home. Since camp counselors and other
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From Car to Coffin in a Matter of Minutes
With the summer heat building over most of America, the problem of children left unattended in hot cars once again takes center stage. While you would never deliberately leave your child in a hot car, an alarming number of adults inadvertently do so because they forget or fail to realize that a child is in
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Kids and Fireworks: A Dangerous Combination
Next week is the 4th of July, and with America’s birthday come the firecrackers and fireworks that celebrate it. There’s no denying that fireworks are beautiful, exciting and fun to watch and use. But as marvelous as fireworks can be, they also pose a serious danger to your children. On average, fireworks and firecrackers injure
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Keeping Your Kids Safe: Summer Pool Safety
Kids love to play in water. Whether it’s your toddler splashing with duckies in the bathtub, your pre-teen playing incessant Marco Polo games with his or her buddies, or your teenager showing off a spectacular dive for an admiring girlfriend or boyfriend, kids and water go together like the proverbial peanut butter and jelly. Unfortunately,
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Asbestos Follow-up: Mesothelioma and Asbestosis
Last week I talked about asbestos, that insidious substance that threatens the health and lives of New York construction workers. This week I want to talk about two of the most common and deadly diseases that workers develop when they inhale microscopic asbestos fibers over long periods of time at work: mesothelioma and asbestosis. Mesothelioma
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Construction Workers and Asbestos
As a New York construction worker, you likely are exposed to asbestos on a daily basis, whether you realize it or not. Asbestos is a naturally occurring mineral found in many construction and consumer products due to its excellent insulating properties and resistance to fire. The problem with asbestos, however, is that it breaks down
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Understanding Soft Tissue Injuries
Last week I discussed the serious injury threshold under New York’s no fault insurance law and how difficult it can be for you to meet that threshold if you suffer a soft tissue injury in a motor vehicle accident and wish to sue the negligent person who caused your accident. This week I want to delve
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Meeting the “Serious Injury” Threshold under New York’s No Fault Insurance Law
New York has a unique law that comes into play when you are injured in a vehicle accident caused by the negligence of someone else. Per Section 5104(a) and (b) of the Insurance Law, in order to sue the person responsible for your injuries, you must be able to establish that you incurred a “basic
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Do You Work in a Sick Building?
You know the symptoms. You cough, you sneeze, your eyes water, you sometimes feel dizzy, your chest feels tight and your muscles ache every time you go to work. You may have attributed these symptoms to your allergies or even to your heavy workload and the stress it causes you, but have you ever considered
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Bus Crashes: Catastrophes for NYC Passengers, Motorists, Pedestrians and Cyclists
On any given weekday, 2.38 million New Yorkers ride a city bus. According to Metropolitan Transportation Authority data, the vast majority of them, 1,997,302, are passengers on one of the MTA’s five local routes serving Brooklyn, the Bronx, Manhattan, Queens and Staten Island. An additional 40,817 are passengers on one of the MTA express routes.
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