Elderly Woman Killed By Falling Bricks While Shoveling Snow In Brooklyn Tragedy

A tragedy took place in Brooklyn, NY, after falling bricks from a building killed an elderly woman while she was shoveling snow off the sidewalk.
According to the  New York Daily News , 74-year-old Dale Singer  died  after bricks from her brownstone fell on her while she was outside clearing the front of her sidewalk after a snowstorm hit the city. This accident occurred around 12:30 p.m. in the Sunset Park section of Brooklyn.
Singer was taken to a local hospital, Maimonides Medical Center, where she was initially listed in critical condition before succumbing to her injuries.


Her son, Wylie Singer, told the media outlet that he heard a sound and ran downstairs to see his mother lying down unconscious.
“All I know is I heard a sound, the sound of the façade falling. I ran downstairs to see my mother at the bottom of the landing, unconscious, dead.”
People  also reported that the NYC Department of Buildings  stated  that forensic engineers issued a vacate order for the structure after a full inspection of the building. They gave the property owner a summons for failure to maintain the building and ordered them to hire a structural engineer and submit an engineer report to DOB on the status of the building.
A neighbor of the victim stated that she witnessed firefighters trying to save Singer.
“That big piece over the door was what hit her,” she said. “I feel so sorry for her. She was a lovely person. I don’t know how the face of the building came down like that.”
Dale’s husband also showed up at the scene after the incident and quickly left in a cab to be with his wife at the hospital.
It was not known if the heavy downpouring of snow contributed to the falling of the facade or if it was an issue due to the structure of the building.
In a December 2023  New York Times  article, Abi Aghayere, a civil engineering professor at Drexel University,  stated  that he feels the city’s oversight of buildings was insufficient. He believes that regulators typically pay more attention to the building before and during construction or when an owner seeks permits. Once the permits are granted and the buildings are completed, Aghayere says that the onus to identify and fix problems is almost always on the owner, and that should make many New Yorkers worried.
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