Notre Dame settles with state in student's death
      SOUTH BEND, Ind. -- 
Notre Dame  will pay a       $42,000 fine for six safety violations, make an  undisclosed contribution       to a memorial for a student videographer  who died at football practice       and start a campaign on the hazards  of scissor lifts as part of a       settlement with the state of  Indiana.    
    
      
The details were announced Friday. Notre  Dame had originally been fined       $77,500 and the most serious charge  against it was that it knowingly put       its employees in an unsafe  situation and failed to heed National Weather       Service warnings on a  day when wind speeds reached 53 mph.    
    
      
The settlement reduces the charge from a knowing violation to a serious       violation.    
           Declan Sullivan, a 20-year-old junior film student from Long  Grove,       Ill., died Oct. 27 after the hydraulic scissor lift he was  on toppled       over in high winds while he was filming football  practice.    
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The report from the  Indiana Occupational Health and Safety       Administration did not  identify who was responsible for making the       decision to allow  student videographers to go up in the lifts that day.       The reports  typically do not include that sort of information.    
           University officials have acknowledged that their procedures and        safeguards weren't adequate but said they couldn't find any one person        to blame for Sullivan's death. A university report found that  several       members of the football staff were monitoring wind speeds  before       practice, but they stopped after they went out for  practice.    
    
      
Sullivan checked later and saw a warning  indicating the possibility of       gusts up to 60 mph. He tweeted that  the weather was "terrifying" and       wrote: "Gusts of wind up to 60  mph today will be fun at work. .. I guess       I've lived long enough."     
    
      
A spokesman for Sullivan's parents said the family  was satisfied with       the settlement, particularly the nationwide  safety campaign.    
    
      
"There can be no better way to  remember Declan than to help others avoid       future tragedies,"  Sullivan's uncle, Mike Miley, wrote by e-mail.    
    
      
Miley  and Notre Dame both said the amount of money Notre Dame was        contributing to the memorial was private matter.    
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