Protecting Workers Injured in Power Plant Explosions, Electrocutions, and Toxic Exposures Across Tampa
Power plant work is among the most dangerous jobs in Florida. Workers face high-voltage electrical systems, pressurized boilers, toxic chemicals, and heavy industrial equipment every shift. When safety failures happen at these facilities, the injuries are almost always severe, and the legal claims that follow involve multiple employers, contractors, and insurance companies. At Fiol & Morros Law Group, our Tampa power plant accident lawyers have spent more than 23 years representing injured workers and their families across Tampa and Hillsborough County.
This past summer, multiple workers experienced injuries and four died as a result of an explosion that rocked Tampa Electric's Big Bend Power Station located in Apollo Beach. The accident occurred while the workers attempted to clear molten slag from a clogged tank. The slag erupted from the tank, killing and injuring the crew.
Prior to the accident, the plant faced an investigation by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) because of several other incidents. This includes another explosion twenty years ago that left several workers injured or burned and two other incidents in 1999 and 2014 that left multiple employees dead because of similar incidents. The inspection has not been resolved yet.
Very little information has come from Tampa Electric's parent companies TECO and Emera Inc. The companies have, so far, refused to release much information about the incident. Tampa Electric, meanwhile, has a history of hiring outside help to conduct the equipment's routine cleaning and maintenance procedures. Union officials claim this was to save money and, by bringing in outside help unfamiliar with the equipment and location, subjected their employees to increased risks at the plant.
TECO later pleaded guilty to federal OSHA violations, paid a $500,000 fine, and was placed on three years of court-ordered probation. The families of the five workers killed reached confidential civil settlements. This case stands as a reminder of the devastating consequences when power companies cut corners on safety, and it underscores why injured workers and their families need experienced legal representation to hold these companies accountable.
Injured in a Power Plant Accident? Get a Free Case Review.
(813) 223-6773
Call today or visit our office at 1515 N Marion St, Tampa, FL 33602. Se habla Espanol.
Why Tampa Workers Choose Fiol & Morros for Power Plant Injury Claims
Power plant accident cases are not simple personal injury claims. They involve OSHA regulations, workers' compensation barriers, third-party contractor liability, and corporate legal teams with deep resources. You need attorneys who understand how to navigate these layers without getting outmaneuvered.
Founding attorney Alejandro Fiol built his career at one of Florida's largest personal injury firms before opening Fiol & Morros to give clients more direct access to experienced trial lawyers. His background includes managing complex multi-party workplace claims where identifying every responsible party was the difference between an adequate settlement and full compensation.
Partner Alina M. Morros brings the same focus to every power plant injury case the firm handles. Together, they've recovered millions for Tampa families dealing with the fallout from preventable industrial accidents.
What sets our firm apart:
- 23+ years of personal injury experience focused on Tampa and Hillsborough County
- Former Morgan & Morgan attorney who chose to open a smaller firm for more hands-on client service
- Experience with complex multi-party industrial injury claims involving OSHA violations and contractor liability
- Bilingual representation in English and Spanish for every client
- No fee unless we win your case. Contingency fee means zero upfront costs.
- Top-rated by Martindale-Hubbell and AVVO with proven case results in workplace injury claims
Power Plant Injury? Get Answers Now. Free Consultation.
(813) 223-6773
Call today or visit our office at 1515 N Marion St, Tampa, FL 33602. Se habla Espanol.
Why Power Plant Accident Claims Are Different
Power plant injury cases operate at the intersection of workers' compensation law, third-party personal injury claims, OSHA regulatory enforcement, and sometimes federal oversight. Understanding these overlapping legal frameworks is critical for maximizing your recovery.
Workers' Compensation vs. Third-Party Claims
Under Florida Statute 440.11, workers' compensation is typically the exclusive remedy against your employer for on-the-job injuries. That means you generally cannot sue your employer directly for negligence. Workers' comp covers medical expenses and a portion of lost wages, but it does not compensate you for pain and suffering, full lost income, or long-term disability beyond set formulas.
However, power plant accidents frequently involve third parties who contributed to the dangerous conditions. Equipment manufacturers, maintenance contractors, subcontractors, and plant owners (when you work for a separate employer) may all bear liability outside the workers' comp system. A third-party personal injury claim allows you to pursue full compensation, including pain and suffering, that workers' comp does not cover.
Premises Liability in Power Plant Cases
Victims and surviving family members should seek legal help as they go forward filing personal injury claims. The potentially complicated fight can take many years to resolve, so having the best team possible can help accelerate that.
Other companies have faced litigation as a result of accidents that caused injury or death to workers and serve as examples for what victims and surviving loved ones can expect to face. As an example, the Kleen Energy Plant in Middletown, Connecticut experienced an explosion in 2010 wherein six workers perished and approximately 60 more were injured while performing debris cleaning duties for natural gas pipes. The gas reached an igniting source and exploded. During arbitration procedures, the arbitrator awarded almost $35 million to employees and families, as well as compensation to homeowners in the surrounding area for damage to their property, because the company hired to perform the cleaning and maintenance had full liability.
Even with that ruling, the insurance company pushed back, refusing to pay the ordered restitution on the grounds that the company itself breached the insurance contract. The legal battle continues today.
OSHA Violations and Their Role in Your Claim
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration sets detailed safety standards for power generation facilities. These include lockout/tagout procedures (29 CFR 1910.147), electrical safety requirements (29 CFR 1910.269), confined space entry protocols, and hazard communication standards for chemical exposure. OSHA lockout/tagout citations alone jumped 29% between 2022 and 2023, reaching 2,532 citations nationwide.
When a power plant accident investigation reveals OSHA violations, those findings can serve as strong evidence of negligence in your personal injury case. The Big Bend Power Station explosion is a clear example. TECO admitted it failed to hold a required safety briefing before sending workers to clear a clogged slag tank. That failure directly contributed to the deaths of five workers.
Florida's Two-Year Filing Deadline
Important: Since Florida HB 837 took effect in March 2023, the statute of limitations for personal injury claims was reduced from four years to two years. For wrongful death claims, the two-year window begins from the date of death. Workers' compensation claims must be reported to your employer within 30 days and filed within two years under 440.19. Missing any of these deadlines can permanently bar your claim.
Comparative Negligence in Power Plant Cases
Florida follows a modified comparative negligence standard under 768.81, enacted through HB 837. If you are found more than 50% at fault for the accident, you cannot recover damages (with certain exceptions). In power plant cases, employers and their insurers often try to shift blame onto workers by arguing they failed to follow safety protocols. An experienced Tampa power plant injury attorney can counter these arguments with OSHA records, maintenance logs, and witness testimony.
Common Types of Power Plant Accidents We Handle in Tampa
Power generation facilities present unique hazards found in few other workplaces. The combination of extreme heat, high-voltage electricity, pressurized systems, and hazardous chemicals creates conditions where a single equipment failure or safety shortcut can cause devastating injuries. Our Tampa power plant accident lawyers handle claims involving:
Boiler and Pressure Vessel Explosions
Boilers, steam generators, and pressure vessels operate under extreme conditions. When maintenance is deferred, pressure relief valves fail, or corrosion weakens vessel walls, the resulting explosions can level entire sections of a facility. The Big Bend slag tank explosion is one of the most well-known examples in Tampa. Workers involved in explosion-related injuries often suffer severe burns, blast trauma, and crush injuries that require years of medical treatment.
Electrocution and Arc Flash Injuries
Power plant workers routinely work near high-voltage systems capable of delivering fatal electrical shocks. Electrocution is a leading cause of death in the power generation industry, and arc flash events, where electrical current jumps through the air, can generate temperatures exceeding 35,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Up to 80% of OSHA-reported electrical injuries in industrial settings involve thermal burns from arc flash incidents. These events happen in fractions of a second and often result in severe burns, vision loss, and cardiac damage.
Chemical and Toxic Substance Exposure
Power plants use and produce hazardous substances including coal ash, fly ash, chlorine, ammonia, asbestos (in older facilities), and various industrial solvents. Workers exposed to these materials may develop respiratory diseases, chemical burns, neurological damage, or occupational cancers. Symptoms of toxic exposure may not appear for months or years after the initial contact, making early legal action and medical documentation essential.
Falls from Heights and Scaffolding Collapses
Power plants contain elevated work platforms, smokestacks, cooling towers, and scaffolding systems where workers regularly perform maintenance at dangerous heights. Inadequate fall protection, defective scaffolding, and poor guardrail systems lead to falls that cause traumatic brain injuries, spinal core damage, and multiple fractures. These injuries frequently result in permanent disability.
Heavy Equipment and Machinery Accidents
Turbines, conveyor systems, cranes, and industrial machinery present constant risks of crush injuries, amputations, and entanglement. Lockout/tagout failures, where equipment is not properly de-energized before maintenance, are one of the most commonly cited OSHA violations in power generation. Workers caught in moving machinery often suffer injuries that permanently change their ability to work and live independently.
Confined Space Incidents
Power plants contain numerous confined spaces including boiler interiors, tanks, ductwork, and underground vaults. Workers entering these spaces face risks of oxygen depletion, toxic gas accumulation, and entrapment. The Big Bend disaster involved workers entering a confined area to clear a slag tank. When proper entry protocols are not followed, confined space incidents carry an extremely high fatality rate.
Steam and Hot Surface Burns
Steam lines, heat exchangers, and exhaust systems operate at temperatures capable of causing instant third-degree burn injuries. Pipe failures, valve malfunctions, and insulation defects expose workers to superheated steam and surfaces. These injuries often require extensive skin grafting, months of hospitalization, and leave permanent scarring and disfigurement.
Your Case Deserves Experienced Representation.
(813) 223-6773
Free consultation. No fee unless we recover compensation. Call (813) 223-6773.
Power Plant Accident Statistics and Safety Data
The numbers behind power plant safety paint a clear picture of the risks Tampa workers face:
2,070 Electrical Fatalities
Between 2011 and 2024, 2,070 U.S. workers died from contact with electricity on the job (OSHA/BLS data)
59% Increase in Electrical Injuries
Non-fatal electrical injuries requiring days away from work totaled 5,180 cases in 2023-2024, a 59% increase from the prior two-year period
49% from Power Line Contact
Overhead power line contact accounts for 49% of all workplace electrical fatalities; unexpected contact with energy sources accounts for another 20%
29% Jump in OSHA Citations
OSHA lockout/tagout citations rose 29% in a single year, from 1,968 in FY2022 to 2,532 in FY2023
80% Arc Flash Burns
Up to 80% of OSHA-reported electrical injuries in industrial settings involve thermal burns from arc flash events
Big Bend Explosion (2017)
The Big Bend Power Station explosion in Tampa killed five workers and led to TECO pleading guilty to federal OSHA violations, a $500,000 fine, and three years of probation
These statistics reflect systemic safety failures across the industry, and each number represents a worker and a family whose life was permanently altered. When power companies and their contractors cut corners on safety, they should be held accountable.
Our Proven Track Record: Over $25 Million Recovered for Injured Clients
At Fiol & Morros Law Group, our results speak for themselves. While every case is unique, our attorneys have secured over $25 million in settlements and verdicts for injured clients across Tampa and throughout Florida. Our aggressive representation and deep knowledge of personal injury law consistently deliver meaningful compensation for our clients.
$3,000,000
Abuse & Neglect — Severe injuries from institutional negligence
$2,500,000
Fatal Truck Accident — Wrongful death from commercial vehicle collision
$2,500,000
Slip & Fall — Catastrophic injury from premises liability
$1,350,000
Institutional Neglect — Severe bedsore injuries and malnutrition
$1,200,000
Car Accident — Significant injuries requiring extensive treatment
$1,000,000
Assisted Living Facility — Neglect resulting in severe harm
$960,000
Trucking Accident — Fractured femur and herniated discs
$875,000
Auto Accident — Cervical disc surgery required after collision
These results demonstrate our commitment to maximizing compensation for every client we represent. Whether your case involves a workplace accident, industrial injury, or power plant incident, our team brings the same relentless advocacy that has produced these outcomes. View all of our case results →
*Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is different and must be evaluated on its own merits.
What Is My Tampa Power Plant Accident Case Worth?
Power plant accident claims typically involve severe injuries and complex liability, which means potential compensation can be substantial. The value of your case depends on several factors specific to your situation.
Economic Damages
Economic damages cover the measurable financial losses you have incurred or will incur:
- Medical expenses: Emergency treatment, surgeries, burn unit care, skin grafts, physical rehabilitation, ongoing specialist visits, prescription medications, and medical devices
- Future medical costs: Long-term care for chronic conditions, additional surgeries, prosthetics, and home health care
- Lost wages: Income missed during recovery, including overtime, bonuses, and shift differentials
- Lost earning capacity: Reduced ability to earn income if your injuries prevent you from returning to power plant work or performing at the same level
- Vocational rehabilitation: Costs of retraining for a new career if you cannot return to your previous occupation
Non-Economic Damages
- Pain and suffering: Physical pain from burns, electrical injuries, blast trauma, and the recovery process
- Emotional distress: PTSD, anxiety, depression, and psychological trauma from surviving an industrial accident
- Loss of enjoyment of life: Inability to participate in activities you enjoyed before the accident
- Disfigurement and scarring: Permanent physical changes from burn injuries, amputations, or surgical scarring
- Loss of consortium: Impact on your relationship with your spouse
Punitive Damages and Wrongful Death
In cases involving gross negligence or repeated OSHA violations, Florida courts may award punitive damages designed to punish the responsible company and deter future safety failures. If a worker was killed in a power plant accident, surviving family members may file a wrongful death claim seeking compensation for funeral and burial expenses, lost financial support, loss of companionship, and mental pain and suffering.
Power plant accident settlements and verdicts vary widely. The Kleen Energy Plant explosion in Connecticut resulted in nearly $35 million in arbitration awards for employees and families. Individual severe burn and electrocution cases in Florida have produced verdicts exceeding $4 million. TECO's $500,000 criminal fine for the Big Bend explosion was separate from the confidential civil settlements reached with the victims' families. Every case is different, and the best way to understand your claim's value is to speak with an experienced Tampa power plant accident lawyer during a free consultation.
Find Out What Your Power Plant Injury Case Is Worth.
(813) 223-6773
Free, confidential case evaluation. Call (813) 223-6773 or visit our Tampa office.
What to Do After a Power Plant Accident in Tampa
The steps you take immediately after a power plant accident can significantly affect your ability to recover compensation. Here is what you should prioritize:
1
Get Medical Attention Immediately
Some power plant injuries, particularly chemical exposure and internal electrical injuries, may not show symptoms right away. Get a full medical evaluation even if you feel fine. Internal burns from electrical current, lung damage from toxic inhalation, and concussions from blast force all require prompt diagnosis. Your medical records also serve as essential evidence in your claim.
2
Report the Accident to Your Employer
Florida law requires that you report a workplace injury to your employer within 30 days to preserve your workers' compensation benefits under 440.185. Report the accident in writing and keep a copy. Include the date, time, location, what happened, and what injuries you sustained. Ask your supervisor for a copy of the accident report.
3
Document Everything You Can
Photograph the accident scene, your injuries, any damaged equipment, and any warning signs (or lack of them). Write down the names of witnesses, supervisors present, and any contractors working at the site. Save copies of your work schedule, pay stubs, and any safety training records. This evidence can be difficult or impossible to collect later, especially if the company begins repairs or cleanup.
4
Do Not Give Recorded Statements to Insurance Companies
Corporate insurers and third-party claims adjusters will contact you quickly after a serious power plant accident. They are trained to minimize payouts. Do not provide recorded statements, sign medical authorization forms, or accept settlement offers before speaking with a power plant accident attorney. Anything you say can be used to reduce or deny your claim later.
5
Preserve All Evidence
Do not wash or dispose of clothing worn during the accident. Keep all medical records, prescription receipts, and billing statements. If you received any safety manuals, training materials, or written policies from your employer, keep those as well. Your attorney may need to send a spoliation letter to prevent the company from destroying or altering evidence.
6
Contact a Tampa Power Plant Accident Lawyer
Power plant injury claims involve tight deadlines, multiple potential defendants, and aggressive corporate defense teams. The sooner you consult with an attorney, the sooner they can begin investigating, preserving evidence, and identifying all liable parties. At Fiol & Morros, your initial consultation is free, and you pay nothing unless we recover compensation for you.
Legal Rights of Injured Power Plant Workers in Florida
Who Can You Sue After a Power Plant Accident?
While workers' compensation bars direct lawsuits against your own employer in most cases, Florida law allows injured workers to file third-party claims against other parties whose negligence contributed to the accident. In power plant cases, potentially liable third parties include:
- Plant owners and operators (when you're employed by a contractor or subcontractor)
- General contractors who controlled site safety
- Equipment manufacturers whose defective products caused or contributed to the accident
- Maintenance and cleaning contractors who performed negligent work
- Engineering firms whose flawed designs created dangerous conditions
- Chemical suppliers who failed to provide adequate safety data or warnings
The Big Bend explosion illustrates this clearly. TECO had a history of hiring outside contractors for equipment cleaning and maintenance. Union officials argued this practice put unfamiliar workers in dangerous situations to save costs. When a plant owner brings in outside labor and fails to ensure their safety, premises liability and negligence claims become available alongside workers' compensation.
Filing Deadlines for Power Plant Accident Claims
Florida's legal deadlines for power plant injury claims are strict:
- Workers' compensation: Report to employer within 30 days; file claim within 2 years
- Personal injury (third-party): File lawsuit within 2 years from the date of accident (95.11)
- Wrongful death: File within 2 years from the date of death
- OSHA complaint: File within 30 days of the safety violation or retaliation
Power plant cases often involve multiple defendants, extensive discovery of corporate records, and expert engineering analysis. Starting early gives your attorney time to build the strongest possible case before any deadlines pass.
How Are Power Plant Injury Settlements Structured?
If you receive both workers' compensation benefits and a third-party settlement, the workers' comp insurer has a statutory lien on your third-party recovery under Florida 440.39. Your attorney can negotiate this lien to maximize the amount you actually keep. Additionally, settlements involving permanent disability may need to account for Medicare Set-Aside arrangements and future medical cost projections. An experienced Tampa power plant injury attorney handles all of these negotiations so you receive the maximum net recovery.
How Our Tampa Power Plant Accident Lawyers Can Help
If you experienced an injury while working on a job site or if you are the surviving loved one of a person killed during an accident on the job site, you are likely owed monetary compensation, which could include payment for lost income and other support from the injured or deceased person or to cover ongoing medical or funeral expenses. You face a potentially long road, so give yourself the best possible start by meeting with lawyers that have experience with personal injury claims stemming from workplace accidents or disasters. Your efforts in bringing a personal injury or wrongful death claim against the company could reveal other negligent practices that threaten other workers still employed at the site.
Power plant injury cases require a legal team that understands industrial operations, OSHA compliance standards, and the corporate defense strategies used by energy companies and their insurers. At Fiol & Morros Law Group, we handle every aspect of your claim from investigation through trial.
Our Power Plant Injury Case Process
1
Free case evaluation: We review your accident, injuries, and employment situation to identify every legal avenue available
2
Investigation: We obtain OSHA inspection reports, accident scene evidence, maintenance logs, safety training records, and contractor agreements
3
Identify all liable parties: We determine whether plant owners, contractors, equipment manufacturers, or other third parties share responsibility
4
Medical documentation: We work with your treating physicians and independent medical experts to document the full scope of your injuries and future care needs
5
Negotiate with insurers: We handle all communication with workers' comp carriers, liability insurers, and corporate defense teams
6
Litigation and trial: If a fair settlement cannot be reached, we are prepared to take your case to court. Our attorneys have the trial experience that makes insurance companies take our cases seriously
Every power plant accident case at Fiol & Morros is handled directly by our attorneys, not passed off to paralegals or case managers. You'll have direct access to Alejandro Fiol and Alina Morros throughout your case. We serve clients across Tampa, Hillsborough County, and throughout Florida, including workers injured at facilities in Apollo Beach, Gibsonton, Riverview, and the greater Tampa Bay region.
Frequently Asked Questions About Power Plant Accidents in Tampa
Can I sue a power plant company for injuries suffered on the job in Florida?Yes. While workers' compensation may cover basic benefits, power plant workers injured due to a company's negligence, such as OSHA violations, unsafe equipment, or inadequate safety procedures, may have grounds for a personal injury or premises liability lawsuit. If a third-party contractor or equipment manufacturer contributed to the accident, additional claims may also be available. Call Fiol & Morros at (813) 223-6773 for a free consultation.
What types of accidents commonly occur at power plants in Tampa?Power plant accidents in Tampa and across Florida commonly include explosions and fires, electrocutions, chemical or toxic substance exposure, equipment failures, falls from heights, being struck by heavy machinery, and accidents during routine maintenance or cleaning operations. Many of these incidents are preventable and stem from OSHA violations, inadequate training, or the use of outside contractors unfamiliar with the equipment.
What compensation can a power plant accident victim recover in Florida?Depending on the circumstances, a power plant accident claim in Florida may recover medical expenses, future treatment costs, lost wages and earning capacity, pain and suffering, permanent disability, and wrongful death damages for surviving families. In cases involving gross negligence or repeated OSHA violations, punitive damages may also be available. Fiol & Morros handles all cases on contingency, so there is no fee unless we win.
Can the family of a worker killed in a power plant explosion file a lawsuit in Florida?Yes. If a loved one was killed in a power plant accident due to a company's negligence, the family may file a wrongful death lawsuit in Florida. Only the personal representative of the deceased's estate can file, but surviving spouses, children, and parents may all be eligible for compensation. Claims must typically be filed within two years of the date of death. Contact Fiol & Morros at (813) 223-6773 today.
Can outside contractors injured at a Tampa power plant file a personal injury claim?Yes. Contract and subcontract workers injured at a power plant may be able to file a personal injury claim against the plant owner or operator, in addition to any workers' compensation claim through their own employer. If the plant's dangerous conditions or negligent practices caused the injury, the plant owner may bear direct liability. Fiol & Morros has experience identifying all liable parties in complex multi-employer power plant cases.
How long do I have to file a power plant injury or wrongful death claim in Florida?For personal injury claims, Florida's statute of limitations generally allows two years from the date of the accident to file a lawsuit. For wrongful death claims, the two-year window begins from the date of death. Power plant cases often involve multiple defendants, OSHA records, and corporate cover-ups, making early legal action essential. Call Fiol & Morros at (813) 223-6773 to protect your rights.
How much does it cost to hire a Tampa power plant accident lawyer?Nothing upfront. Fiol & Morros handles all power plant accident cases on a contingency fee basis. You pay no attorney fees unless we recover compensation for you. The consultation is free, and we advance all case costs during the litigation. If we don't win, you don't pay.
What if OSHA cited the power plant for safety violations before my accident?Prior OSHA citations can serve as strong evidence of negligence in your personal injury claim. They demonstrate that the company knew about safety deficiencies and failed to correct them. TECO's Big Bend Power Station had a documented history of OSHA investigations before the 2017 explosion that killed five workers. Your attorney can obtain OSHA inspection records and use them to strengthen your case.
How does workers' compensation affect my third-party lawsuit recovery?If you receive workers' compensation benefits and also win a third-party lawsuit, the workers' comp insurer has a lien on your third-party recovery under Florida 440.39. This means a portion of your settlement or verdict may go toward reimbursing the workers' comp carrier. Your attorney can negotiate this lien amount to maximize what you keep. This is one reason having an experienced power plant accident attorney is so important.
What evidence should I preserve after a power plant accident?Keep all clothing worn during the accident, photographs of the scene and your injuries, medical records, prescription receipts, work schedules, pay stubs, safety training materials, and any written communications with your employer or their insurance company. Do not sign any documents or give recorded statements before consulting an attorney. Your lawyer may also send a spoliation letter to prevent the company from destroying evidence.
How long does a power plant accident case take in Tampa?Power plant injury cases are typically more complex than standard personal injury claims. Cases involving multiple defendants, OSHA investigations, and severe injuries can take 12 to 36 months or longer to resolve. Some cases settle during negotiations, while others require litigation and trial. Fiol & Morros keeps you informed at every stage and works to resolve your case as efficiently as possible without sacrificing the compensation you deserve.
Does Fiol & Morros handle power plant accident cases in Spanish?Yes. Fiol & Morros Law Group provides full legal representation in both English and Spanish. Many power plant workers in the Tampa Bay area are Spanish-speaking, and we make sure language is never a barrier to getting the legal help you deserve. Call (813) 223-6773 for a free consultation in your preferred language.
Contact a Tampa Power Plant Accident Attorney Today
The Tampa personal injury lawyers at Fiol & Morros Law Group can help you understand just how such a company violated your rights or the rights of your deceased family. They can help you discover how much money you deserve and how to go about filing the claims correctly.
Power plant accidents cause some of the most devastating injuries in any workplace. If you or a loved one was hurt in an explosion, electrocution, chemical exposure, or any other power plant incident in Tampa or anywhere in Florida, you have legal rights that deserve to be protected. The companies and insurers involved in these cases have teams of lawyers working to minimize their liability. You deserve a legal team that fights just as hard for you.
At Fiol & Morros Law Group, we've spent more than 23 years standing up for injured workers and their families. Every consultation is free, every case is handled on contingency, and every client gets direct access to our attorneys.
Call Now for a Free Power Plant Injury Consultation
(813) 223-6773
1515 N Marion St, Tampa, FL 33602 | Se habla Espanol
You can also contact us online to schedule your free case review. We serve injured workers across Tampa, Hillsborough County, and throughout Florida.