The University of Notre Dame was cited with workplace safety violations carrying proposed penalties of $77,500 in the death of a 20-year-old student employee who was killed in October while filming a football team practice.
Declan Sullivan, a junior who worked as a videographer for the university’s football squad, was perched about 50 feet high on a scaffold known as a scissor lift in in gusts of 45 miles per hour or more when the apparatus was blown down.
Commissioner Lori Torres of the Indiana Department of Labor, during a morning news briefing at the statehouse in Indianapolis, announced that her agency issued a “knowing citation,” its most serious violation. “The evidence overwhelmingly demonstrated that the university made a decision to utilize its scissor lifts in known adverse weather conditions,” she explained.
The agency also cited Notre Dame for failing to train employees in the proper use of scissor lifts.
The lifts are popular with athletic programs around the country, though many have safety regulations in place that restrict their use in dangerous conditions. Texas Tech told ESPN.com that it doesn’t allow the lifts to be extended above 20 feet in winds of 20 miles per hour or more, and they are banned altogether when gusts reach 40 miles per hour. Many schools use hand-held monitors so that operators know when the gusts are reaching a dangerous level.
Since the use of scissor lifts is so widespread in school sports and band programs, the Indiana Department of Labor said that it would launch an outreach program to ensure compliance with safety regulations. Last week Notre Dame said it would stop using scissor lifts, instead relying on a remote-controlled camera system to record practices.
The school has 15 business days to pay the fines or contest the citations. The university provided no immediate comment, but a spokesman said it was preparing a written response.
Related Posts:
Death of Notre Dame Student in Lift Collapse Sparks Investigation


