New
legislation announced on Monday by City
Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn and
Deputy Mayor for Operations Edward Skyler
aims to enhance safety protocols, oversight,
and inter-agency communication at
construction, demolition and abatement sites
across New York City.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg ordered a
comprehensive review of construction,
demolition and abatement sites in the wake
of the fire at the former Deutsche Bank
building at 130 Liberty Street that killed
two New York City firefighters, Joseph
Graffagnino and Robert Beddia.
The seven-month examination was led by
Deputy Mayor Edward Skyler and included
representatives from the Fire Department,
the Department of Environmental Protection,
the Department of Buildings, the Law
Department and the Mayor’s Office of
Operations.
“After the tragic fire at 130 Liberty
Street, Mayor Bloomberg asked for a review
of similar construction sites to answer the
questions raised by the fire,” said Deputy
Mayor Skyler. “We convened a comprehensive
working group and developed a series of
reforms to improve safety protocols,
increase the City’s oversight and ensure the
agency’s overseeing the work sites are
talking to each other and sharing
information,” he added.
The new
legislation resulting from this effort
incorporates 33 recommendations to enhance
standpipe and sprinkler safety, improve
inter-agency communication, increase safety
at construction and demolition sites,
regulate oversight and improve safety of
asbestos abatement.
The new legislation includes 11 bills that
include the following measures:
•
Implementation of the uniform color coding
of standpipe and sprinkler systems for ease
of identification in case of emergency;
• Required pressure testing of new or
altered sprinkler or standpipe systems;
• Site safety managers mandate to conduct
daily checks of standpipes and weekly
tracing of the system at construction and
demolition sites to ensure no breach has
occurred;
• DEP, FDNY and DOB mandate to share
information about violations issued and
other key inspection data so that inspectors
from all three agencies are aware of any
serious problems and have the knowledge to
allocate sufficient resources to the
properties with the highest risks;
• Mandatory submission of a detailed plan
for demolition by a registered design
professional in the permit application
process;
• Implementation of a zero-tolerance smoking
policy at certain demolition, construction
and abatement sites;
• Limiting simultaneous asbestos abatement
and full demolition work unless the job
meets certain thresholds established by DEP,
FDNY and DOB;
“Taken together, these measures represent a
significant overhaul of the City’s
demolition and asbestos abatement
procedures,” said Speaker Quinn. “And once
they are implemented, they will take us a
major step forward in making sure that
conditions in this industry never lead to
another event like the one that took the
lives of Joseph Graffagnino and Robert
Beddia. Our thoughts and prayer go out to
their families today,” she added.