Coverage Area — ZIP 89146
About Construction Accidents in ZIP 89146, Las Vegas
Hurt on a construction site in Spring Valley? Nevada construction workers injured on the job have both workers compensation rights under NRS 616 and potential third-party claims against general contractors, equipment manufacturers, and property owners. A Spring Valley construction accident attorney pursues every avenue of recovery — including pain and suffering damages that workers comp doesn't cover.
ZIP code 89146 is part of the Spring Valley area of Las Vegas, Nevada. NevadaAttorneyFinder's listings for this ZIP code include attorneys who are familiar with the Spring Valley community, Clark County courts, and Nevada's construction accidents statutes.
Frequently Asked Questions
OSHA's 'Fatal Four' account for most construction deaths in Spring Valley and nationwide: (1) Falls — from scaffolding, ladders, roofs, and elevated work platforms (NRS 616C regulations require fall protection); (2) Struck-by — being hit by vehicles, equipment, or falling objects; (3) Caught-in/between — caught in machinery or between equipment; (4) Electrocution — contact with power lines or unguarded electrical systems. Las Vegas's active high-rise and resort construction adds crane accidents and concrete form collapses. A Spring Valley construction accident attorney will identify all liable parties.
Yes — general contractors and property owners can be held liable for construction injuries beyond workers compensation. If your employer was a subcontractor, the general contractor may be liable as the entity responsible for overall site safety. Property owners may be liable for hazardous conditions. Equipment manufacturers may be liable for defective machinery. These third-party claims — separate from workers comp — allow you to recover pain and suffering and other damages not covered by workers comp. A Spring Valley construction accident attorney can identify all third-party claims.
Common OSHA violations under 29 C.F.R. § 1926 that lead to Spring Valley construction accidents include: inadequate fall protection (§ 1926.502), scaffold violations (§ 1926.451), failure to lock out/tag out electrical equipment (§ 1926.417), inadequate personal protective equipment, unsupported trench walls (§ 1926.652), and crane/derrick violations (§ 1926.1400). OSHA citations issued after an accident are important evidence of negligence. A Spring Valley construction accident attorney will request OSHA investigation records as part of building your case.
Yes — these are separate and complementary claims. Workers compensation under NRS 616 provides medical benefits and wage replacement from your employer's insurer regardless of fault (exclusive remedy against your employer). A third-party personal injury lawsuit can be filed against any party other than your direct employer — the general contractor, another subcontractor, an equipment manufacturer, or the property owner. Third-party claims allow you to recover pain and suffering, full lost wages, and other damages workers comp doesn't cover. A Spring Valley construction accident attorney handles both simultaneously.