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NewsWednesday, July 23, 2008 10:15 PM CDT
Coroner IDs ironworker found dead after Normal crane collapse
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NORMAL -- A 33-year-old Mason County construction worker died Wednesday when a crane collapsed onto a raised basket in which he was working at a north Normal construction site.

Josh M. Dawe, an iron worker for Area Erectors, was killed about 10:30 a.m. at the site of the Wildwood Indus-tries building under construction at North Main Street and East Kerrick Road, McLean County Coroner Beth Kimmerling said in a prepared statement.

“Upon their arrival, rescue personnel observed an individual in the basket of an aerial lift who had no obvious signs of life,” Kimmerling said.

There had been reports at first of at least three people trapped, but Dawe, father of an infant, was the only casu-alty. Other workers were assessed for injuries at the scene, but none was taken to the hospital, Kimmerling said.

Neither Kimmerling nor Deputy Coroner David Killian was able to reach Dawe until Normal firefighters were able to secure the scene. Because of that delay, Dawe was pronounced dead officially at the scene slightly after 12:30 p.m.

Preliminary evidence indicates that while girders and joists were being set for the sprawling building’s roof, the boom of the crane collapsed onto the basket of the aerial lift, trapping Dawe, Kimmerling said.

The mangled crane came to rest on the building’s steel-beam roof framework after ripping a hole in a concrete wall on the south side of the structure.

The cause of the collapse has yet to be determined, Kimmerling said.

Normal and Hudson fire crews and Normal and McLean County sheriff’s police responded to the accident.

Occupational Health and Safety Administration employees were at the accident site Wednesday, said Barry Salerno, acting area director of OSHA’s Peoria office. OSHA and Normal police are working with Kimmerling’s office in the investigation.

At the scene, construction workers were visibly shaken as they cleared the way for emergency workers. As people arrived on the site following the accident, several exchanged hugs and words of concern with the other workers.

About the construction site

Bloomington-based Wildwood makes vacuum cleaner bags, carpet and upholstery cleaner, steam cleaning machines and Triton brand vacuum cleaners, according to its Web site. Its new facility, under construction just east of the intersection of Main and Kerrick and north of the Nussbaum Trucking property, mainly will operate as a logistics center, including processing parts.

The subcontractor managing crane operations at the site was Area Erectors, said Bill Johnston with Bloomington-based general contractor Johnston Contractors Inc. He declined further comment.

Area Erectors, which has a home office in Rockford and others throughout Illinois and Wisconsin, handles pre-cast concrete and steel erection for general contractors, according to its Web site.

Office workers at Area Erectors offices in Rockford and Peoria said Wednesday afternoon that no one was available for comment. Company officials were at the site of the accident as part of an investigation, they said.

A staffer said the company would release a statement at the conclusion of that investigation.

Safety checks

Wednesday’s fatal accident comes on the heels of several other fatal crane collapses across the U.S. that have put extra scrutiny on crane safety.

Four workers were killed in a collapse Friday in Houston, and there have been other incidents in Miami and Las Vegas. In New York City, two crane accidents since March have killed nine people -- a greater number than the total deaths from cranes over the previous decade.

Employers are required to inspect machinery on a daily basis for general working condition, such as checking cables, Salerno said. Employers also are required to have a detailed annual certified inspection following American National Standards Institute guidelines, Salerno said.

He declined to comment on the general safety of cranes, but said OSHA inspects equipment if OSHA representatives are on a construction site for another reason, a complaint is filed or an accident occurs, Salerno said.

Employers are required to notify OSHA within eight hours of a fatality, Salerno said.

In the past 10 years, Area Erectors has had 30 investigations, most of which were planned visits, according to OSHA’s Web site. Out of those cases, 11 violations were issued.

This incident is not the Twin Cities’ first construction site fatality.

Broeren Russo of Champaign was the subcontractor at the construction site of the parking garage near where Hovey Avenue intersects Main and Kingsley streets. A 24-year-old Houston, Texas, man died in December 2004 after concrete slabs fell and crushed him.

Ryan Denham contributed to this report.

Take a look
A Normal police officer stands with construction workers visibly shaken after the collapse of a crane at a construction site in north Normal on Wednesday. (The Pantagraph/STEVE SMEDLEY)
A construction crane's boom lies collapsed over a section of steel roofing Wednesday morning on the southeast side of a large building being constructed in north Normal. (The Pantagraph/STEVE SMEDLEY)
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Reader comments on this story - 35 total

Note: All views and opinions expressed in reader comments are solely those of the individual submitting the comment, and not those of the Pantagraph or its staff.

CraneOp wrote on Jul 25, 2008 9:21 PM:

" Thoughts and prayers with Josh and his family. Also to all other tradesman on that job site. As a crane operator myself, I know this has affected every crane operator. Unexplained accidents happen that only the man upstairs knows the reason. May we only find out when we too get there. "

gradechecker wrote on Jul 25, 2008 3:24 PM:

" To the baby girl who will never know her Daddy, to her mother, to all of Josh's family and freinds who will need strenght to keep his memeroy alive, and to Local 112 who proudly call this man your brother:
We feel your grief. We're your brothers and sisters in the Trades. You are family. Your loss is our loss. Just as we stand proudly on the ground supporting our brothers who work the air, we're here for you now, and again, and again. Some met Josh on a worksite, some didn't. We all know him just the same. We have went home to our families, went to bed, we have got up, went to work, all with a heavy heart. Things need to be built, there are schedules to keep, families to feed, bills to pay. You have remained in our thoughts and prayers.
BabyGirl, we're passing our hardhats, giving what we can, whatever way we can. Together we make a difference. You may grow up not knowing Daddy, we know who you are. You will know us by words we use, hardworking, strong, proud, brave, brotherhood, united and union....... Sleep tight. "

leroymom wrote on Jul 25, 2008 7:06 AM:

" Very sad. This was a young man. And he left behind a baby that will never know her father. This is very disturbing to me. To Ms. Clark: I am so sorry for your loss. My thoughts and prayers are with you, your family and Mr. Dawe's family. Hopefully everyone on here will quit being selfish and start thinking about those who are suffering right now. "

Ironworker498 wrote on Jul 24, 2008 8:55 PM:

" My thoughts and prayers go out to all my brother Ironworkers that have been touched by this tragic event. Don't let a day go by without telling the ones close to you that you love them before heading out to work each and everyday. This is a dangerous job we have, and you never know what the day will have in store for you. From Local 498 to our brothers of 112. Joshua Dawe's family, friends, and brother Ironworkers will be a part of our thoughts and prayers during this trying time.

R.I.P. "

JimmyChooGirl wrote on Jul 24, 2008 11:23 AM:

" My thoughts and prayers are with the family of Josh and to the other construction workers who risk their lives daily. "

mannie wrote on Jul 24, 2008 10:51 AM:

" I feel great distress for all involved. This is something that will weigh on all of their hearts for the rest of their lives. This is a great tragedy to all unions involved. Prayers with the operator who is at no fault, Prayers with the families who lost a beloved one early in life, and prayers for his baby who will grow up not knowing their father personally. This is becoming a to common factor and they need to make better inspection on those huge crawler cranes, an annual inspection has become no longer good enough. Let’s not lose more lives before that make the adequate changes to their procedures let’s make the changes today! "

rrhcs wrote on Jul 24, 2008 10:19 AM:

" First to the family, friends and coworkers, our hearts go out to you. It is a loss felt by all. To normalguy.... I disagree with your union theory. It is a known fact that because someone SAYS that they know how to operate a piece of equipment, be it a backhoe, skid steer, track hoe, crane, or any other kind of heavy equipment, they are sent to run machines that they may have zero experience in. Union does not = experience.... experience equals experience, familiarity with a machine and matainance are the best safety factors. A union card does not mean you have experience or are safe. "

PantaReader wrote on Jul 24, 2008 7:32 AM:

" Our prayers go out for Josh and his family, including his family of coworkers who are all hurting from this loss. May all workers everywhere be protected. God bless you all. "

Eric H wrote on Jul 24, 2008 12:56 AM:

" This and the concrete truck tip-over a few weeks ago have really reminded me how important it is on a jobsite to plan ahead, know where you can escape to, look twice, not sweat the extra few seconds to go around the safe way instead of the risky shortcut, etc. (from the story it doesn't sound like the man who was killed had neglected any of these; I hope that no one else had, either). I'm very sorry to hear of this. Every time my family drives or bikes by this site, my 2-year-old asks, "Crane doing?" Now that question will be a reminder to me to ask God to comfort this gentleman's family. "

3mom wrote on Jul 23, 2008 10:14 PM:

" Well written comments "bishop1211". My prayers and thoughts go out to all of you who worked with Josh, and of course, to his friends, and family. "

alexp wrote on Jul 23, 2008 9:46 PM:

" To 2tired: But we don't see reports of crane collapses in China. And b4 anyone say the media is suppressed there that isn't the case. We got lots of news about the earthquake. "

bishop1211 wrote on Jul 23, 2008 8:56 PM:

" thank you all for your comments i am an iron worker who is on that site, josh was a brother and well liked in our hall. thank you for your prayer request for him and his family they will need everyone of them now. your right it is a dangerous trade one of the top 5 and no matter how much training and experience these tragedies happen. we are union and trained and experienced and we love our trade. josh died doing what he loved instead of looking for fault lets take a moment to remember our fallen brother. may he be remembered because he will be missed. "

boilermaker wrote on Jul 23, 2008 8:29 PM:

" best wishes to his father and family "

normalguy wrote on Jul 23, 2008 8:21 PM:

" glad we have unions, imagine how many more tragedies there would be without them. "

My Thoughts... wrote on Jul 23, 2008 7:36 PM:

" To Frank: News Flash "Drugs and alcohol are NOT always the cause of accident". Alot of the time it is just a malfunction.- a defective part..a worn cable.....I have worked around ALL kinds of cranes in my lifetime and have found that the inspections are done regularly - as mandated by OSHA. Then when a person doing a "visual" inspection doesn't see that the cable may be worn a little- then boom....the cable twists/breaks.....
My thoughts and prayers are with this family- "

thunderstruck wrote on Jul 23, 2008 6:39 PM:

" As a fellow construction worker (laborer) and someone that worked all last week at the site it hits home.
People call us overpaid alot, this is what hapens when we risk our lives to build things. I feel for the family, we go to work assuming things will go wrong and prepared for when they dont but it's still sad news "

pseudo-intellectual wrote on Jul 23, 2008 6:28 PM:

" Is it possible accidents involving cranes are being reported more thoroughly by the news media? Remember the summer of shark attacks just before 9/11? When I lived in California, after an earthquake the national media would report any quake greater than Richter 2.0, even though these occur all over the world every day. We sometimes forget how much construction involving cranes is taking place in this country, even in smaller communities. The deaths and injuries are tragic, but these cranes are used in very complicated, inherently dangerous work in multitudes of places. We shouldn't be surprised when there are accidents. "

jaz23 wrote on Jul 23, 2008 6:05 PM:

" My thoughts and many prayers to the family "

east payson st wrote on Jul 23, 2008 6:04 PM:

" boomer up,cable up,peace be with you brother. "

Annienap wrote on Jul 23, 2008 5:41 PM:

" Are all of these cranes built by the same company? If so, what company is building them? I, too, have thought some kind of sabotage because there are just TOO many collapsing and TOO often. May God Bless this family and the friends and co-workers of this young man. "

cats55ire wrote on Jul 23, 2008 5:18 PM:

" Thoughts and prayers to the family!!! God bless you! "

AM wrote on Jul 23, 2008 3:58 PM:

" No, it's not Chinese steel. Most of these cranes have been here for years. Prayers for the family and all the brothers and sisters on the site. "

thoughts a million wrote on Jul 23, 2008 3:47 PM:

" A little research shows all are different:
--New York City officials are under bribe investigation for failing to inspect cranes.
--Las Vegas crane death was from a worker walking on a moving crane and getting crushed in a moving part.
--Miami deaths were from a crane mounted on the side of a building that was lifting another section, which fell.
--Houston deaths were from a portable crane that collapsed that was not in operation. It was not scheduled to be used until the following week.

Bad Chinese steel? Our "best" cranes being sent overseas? Come on readers, do a little research before resorting to paranoia!! "

Brother Ironworker wrote on Jul 23, 2008 3:12 PM:

" I can tell by the hard hats that it was an ironworker killed. These men risk their lives building the place you work, you shop. Please do not place blame or put politics in it. Union ironworkers are the safest most well trained tradespeople in the Industry. Please pray for the victim and the victims family. And also pray for his brother ironworkers and the other tradesmen on the job, I have witnessed the fatalities of two of my brother ironworkers and it affects you for the rest of you life. God bless you all my thoughts and prayers are with you. "

New Nana wrote on Jul 23, 2008 2:30 PM:

" Very sad....Again, thoughts and prayers to the Family. By the way, a crane accident just killed one in Decatur about three weeks ago. This was railroad construction. "

ONLY IN AMERICA wrote on Jul 23, 2008 2:22 PM:

" My thougths and prayers go out to the workers & the victim's family. "

What The Hey wrote on Jul 23, 2008 1:46 PM:

" God Bless and give comfort to those involved. Spanky - you can rest assured that OSHA will be involved. "

2tired wrote on Jul 23, 2008 1:31 PM:

" This was an accident from 2 pieces of equipment colliding. This was from the crane just failing, like you have been reading about. Also there is nothing wrong with the equipment here in the states, and our best equipment is not being sent over to china. The equipment they are using over there wouldn’t pass inspection here in the states. "

nicksmynick wrote on Jul 23, 2008 1:19 PM:

" I am beginning to wonder if someone is traveling the country specifically to sabotage these construction cranes.

Or it is a reflection of Chinese steel........ "

zorro wrote on Jul 23, 2008 1:03 PM:

" Construction workers are a very close-knit group of men and women. This tragedy touches each and every one of us. God bless their families. "

woodyzhouse wrote on Jul 23, 2008 12:45 PM:

" I just want to say how sorry I am for all of the construction workers and family of
this man. This kind of story is a terrible tragedy for anyone involved. May he rest
in peace now. "

Spanky wrote on Jul 23, 2008 12:34 PM:

" Way to many of these types of accidents lately! This needs to be really looked at hard by OSHA and other government agencies!! "

upsmom wrote on Jul 23, 2008 12:24 PM:

" Do you know why these cranes fail, because all the good ones that we(America) used are now being employed by China And Dubai, we now have the inferior ones. To early to tell if that was the case here but it should anger people that we now are at the bottom of the totem pole for safe top of the line equipment. My heart goes out to the workers and the families in this tragedy. "

Jarhead71 wrote on Jul 23, 2008 12:11 PM:

" "default" is correct about this. What is going on with the setup or materials used in these construction cranes. This makes about the sixth or seventh time in as many months that one of these collapses has happened across the USA. Is it a material fault, a setup defeciency, or a design flaw? "

default wrote on Jul 23, 2008 11:41 AM:

" Wow, this is happening all over the country these days. "

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