Construction injuries around Exeter often involve circumstances that make documentation and responsibility harder than people expect:
- Work near active access points. Even when a site is “contained,” crews may be working close to public routes, driveways, or pedestrian paths.
- Multiple crews and contractors. A general contractor may coordinate the project while subcontractors handle the specific task where the injury occurred.
- Seasonal conditions and dust/weather exposure. Hazards can change quickly when footing, visibility, and cleanup practices shift.
- Commercial delivery and traffic flow. Material deliveries and equipment movement can create struck-by and caught-in-between risks—especially when traffic patterns are tight.
When injuries happen in these environments, the question becomes less “what did someone call it?” and more what safety obligations were in place, who controlled the conditions, and what evidence shows the hazard and causation.


