Roselle sits in the kind of corridor where road access and daily movement matter. In practice, that can affect construction injury cases in ways people don’t expect:
- Work zones near active streets and driveways: hazards may be blamed on “conditions on the day,” even though safety planning is supposed to account for normal foot and vehicle traffic.
- Multiple contractors and overlapping schedules: one company may control a task, while another controls site access, barricades, or staging areas.
- Delivery and equipment traffic: struck-by and caught-between incidents can occur when trucks, forklifts, or lifts share space with workers or pedestrians.
- Fast-moving scene changes: once the crew clears an area, photos and key details can disappear—making early documentation critical.
When you’re trying to recover, you shouldn’t have to guess which details matter most for liability and damages.


