The collapse of a lift device in a freak wind storm caused the death of a Notre Dame student earlier this week, and could result in the university being cited for safety violations.
Declan Sullivan, a 20-year old junior from Long Grove, Ill., was videotaping a practice of the Notre Dame football team on Wednesday from the platform of a scissor lift, amid a weather system that brought wind gusts of up to 50 miles per hour. According to Jack Swarbrick, Notre Dame’s athletic director, the lift collapsed after a particularly strong gust, and Sullivan was declared dead shortly thereafter.
A scissor lift is raised by linked, folding supports that resemble scissor blades. Safety experts question why a scissor lift was being operated in such conditions, and, as the South Bend Tribune reports, the Indiana Occupational Safety and Health Administration arrived on Thursday to investigate the incident. State safety guidelines prohibit the use of scaffolds, as the scissor lift is classified, in high winds.
If the university is found liable, it faces citations and penalties that exceed $100,000.
Many athletic programs have internal regulations in place that would seem to have prevented a tragedy like the one at Notre Dame. A spokesman with the Texas Tech football program told ESPN that scissor lifts, which typically extend to up to 40 feet, are limited to 20 feet when winds reach 20 miles an hour, and prohibited altogether when there are gusts of 40 miles per hour. Employees working on scissor lifts are also given hand-held wind monitors so they know when when speeds reach a dangerous level.
According to reports, Sullivan, a student video worker, posted a note on his Twitter account referring to the conditions while on the lift: “Holy [blank]. Holy [blank]. This is terrifying.”
The collapse occurred roughly 45 minutes later.


