Construction projects in the Central Valley often involve multiple trades, subcontractors, and mobile crews working across phases of the same site. When an injury happens, the dispute frequently becomes:
- Who had day-to-day control of the area where the injury occurred?
- Which company was responsible for site safety at that moment?
- Whether the hazard was created by the contractor’s work method—or existed due to broader site management.
In Coalinga, that can mean injuries tied to active work near staging areas, access routes, or temporary walkways where deliveries and equipment keep moving. It’s also common for witnesses—sometimes employees of different subcontractors—to be hard to track down once the project advances.


