In many Michigan construction injury disputes, “who was in charge” matters as much as “what went wrong.” On fast-moving job sites, responsibility can shift between:
- The general contractor managing the overall site
- A subcontractor controlling the specific task
- Equipment owners or operators
- Companies responsible for deliveries, staging, or traffic control
In Dearborn—where construction activity may overlap with local commerce and commuter routes—injuries can be tied to how a site was secured. Examples we commonly see in the real world include:
- Lack of clear barriers between work zones and pedestrian paths
- Inadequate signage or lighting during early-morning or evening work
- Unsafe truck backing, material unloading, or staging on or near access roads
- Improper lane closures or weak traffic control plans
Those details affect negligence and causation in practical ways. They also change what evidence is available, who has records, and what witnesses are easiest to identify.


