Many construction injuries in the Gardner area involve more than one company on-site. A typical scenario might include a general contractor overseeing the project, a subcontractor completing a specific task, and equipment providers responsible for machinery or safety equipment.
When that happens, insurers may try to narrow responsibility to the “other” party—especially when the accident occurs during busy construction windows (site prep, framing, concrete work, roofing, landscaping, or utility tie-ins). If you don’t act early, you can lose the chance to document:
- which company controlled the work at the time of the accident
- what safety practices were in place (and what wasn’t)
- what training records or maintenance logs exist for the equipment involved
- how the site was secured from pedestrians/traffic where applicable


