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Bridge collapse at Indiana casino construction site injures
workers
By Tom Eley
24 July 2008
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On Tuesday, a bridge collapse on a floating casino in Hammond,
Indiana, injured a dozen construction workers. The Horseshoe Casino,
which is moored on Lake Michigan directly offshore near the border
with Illinois (and the city of Chicago), was nearing completion
of a $500 million remodeling project at the time of the accident.
The bridge, which attached the riverboat casino to the main
pavilion, gave way early in the morning. Several workers, feeling
tremors, jumped off the bridge into the lake 10 feet below. Others
then fell in when the bridge collapsed, while a few more jumped
in afterwards to rescue their coworkers. In all a dozen suffered
injury, but only one was hospitalized and later released.
The cause of the collapse has yet to be determined. Evidently
the bridge had been propped up by a barge floating below, and
supports gave way prematurely. The Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) promised an investigation.
Workers privately informed a local Chicago television affiliate
that there has been incredible pressure to accelerate the
pace of the project in time for the casinos reopening
scheduled August 8. Horseshoe officials assured the media that
the accident would not delay reopening. The workers are members
of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers and the
Laborers International Union of North America.
Though a genuine tragedy was narrowly averted, the accident
offers a telling glimpse of the socially regressive nature of
contemporary life in the US.
Worker deaths and accidents have been on the rise for many
years. While the details of the Hammond accident have yet to fully
emerge, the general trend itself arises from the gutting of workplace
regulation and oversight that has taken place over the past quarter-century,
with the acquiescence of the trade unions.
Hammond is an old steel city, which for many years sat astride
one of the worlds greatest industrial centers, Calumet,
a zone of steel milling and attendant industries that stretched
from south Chicago and Joliet, Illinois, all the way to Benton
Harbor, Michigan, and encompassed the US Steel company town of
Gary, Indiana. The area has been ravaged by deindustrialization
and is now one of the most concentrated areas of poverty in the
US.
In this enormous belt of poverty, social need would dictate
that vast resources be allocated for the construction of schools,
the improvement of infrastructure, the creation of a livable urban
area with culture, education, and green space, as well as the
resurrection of industry and jobs. Yet social priorities under
capitalism, such as they are, have found resources instead for
the launching of a half-billion dollar casino. In fact, rather
than providing decent jobs, the operation aims to prey on the
desperation of the working class of the area.
Officially, 20.3 percent of Hammonds population lives
in poverty. The citys estimated median household income
in 2005 was $33,586, a decrease from $35,528 in 2000. The
citys estimated population also dropped, by almost 6 percent,
between 2000 and 2006, from 83,048 to 78,292. To put the casino
renovation in perspective: the half-billion dollars being spent
on this one facility represents about 40 percent of the combined
annual income of the citys entire population ($1.27
billion).
Gambling itself is one of the few growth industries
remaining in the US. Harrahs Entertainment, a multibillion-dollar
gambling outfit, is controlled by enormous investment funds such
as Texas Pacific Group and Apollo Management.
The web site of Harrahs Entertainment, which owns the
casino, boasts: The all new Horseshoe Casino Hammond will
soon completely transform its coveted location along Lake Michigan.
Construction is well underway to create an amazing new gaming
and entertainment facilitythe total size will be an unbelievable
350,000 square-feet.
With over 108,000 square feet of gambling space, more
than triple in size of the current casino, the new casino will
include spectacular amenities, an incredible entertainment venue,
and more luxury than ever before. Its truly a remarkable
expansion boasting a $500 million price tag.
See Also:
Four workers dead in Texas crane disaster
[21 July 2008]
Six workers killed in construction
of Las Vegas CityCemetery
[14 June 2008]
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