The days after a jobsite injury often determine whether a claim is strong or stalled. Before you worry about legal strategy, focus on safety and medical care—then preserve evidence while it’s still available.
Consider these practical steps:
- Get medical documentation immediately. Even if you think the injury is minor, follow-up care and symptom notes matter.
- Write down your timeline while it’s fresh: what you were doing, what you noticed, and what changed right before the accident.
- Preserve site evidence if you can do so safely: photos of the hazard, markings, barriers, walkway conditions, ladders/scaffolding access, and the surrounding work zone.
- Identify who controlled the work area (general contractor, subcontractor, foreman, safety officer) and ask how to document the incident internally.
- Be cautious with recorded statements. In many cases, early statements can be used to minimize responsibility or dispute causation.
If the accident involved traffic patterns—like delivery vehicles, temporary lanes, or pedestrian areas near the work zone—tell your lawyer right away. Those details can affect how liability is evaluated.


