After a construction incident, your focus should be safety and medical care. Then, while memories and site conditions are still fresh, take practical steps that protect your claim:
- Report the injury through the proper channels (and keep a copy). On active jobsites, paperwork can be the difference between “we think” and “it’s documented.”
- Ask for the incident details to be recorded accurately—where you were, what you were doing, and what hazards were present.
- Preserve evidence while it’s still on-site: photos of the area (including temporary barriers, walkways, ladders, spills/debris), and any visible signage or traffic control.
- Write down your timeline before your schedule gets overloaded—time of day, weather conditions, crew members you saw, and what changed right before the injury.
- Be careful with recorded statements. Insurers may request quick answers, and what you say can later be used to dispute causation or the seriousness of your injury.
In Rockledge, jobsite injuries frequently intersect with everyday routes—driveways, sidewalks, and entrances used by workers and visitors. That’s why location-specific details (access points, proximity to active traffic, and how pedestrians were routed) can matter.


