In construction injury cases, the earliest decisions can make or break the case. In Canandaigua, that often means acting quickly while the job site is still secured and project personnel are still available.
Focus on:
- Get medical care and insist it’s documented. Follow-up visits, restrictions, and diagnosis codes matter later.
- Preserve photos and short videos showing the hazard, the general layout, and the conditions around the time of the incident (weather, lighting, access routes, barriers).
- Write down a timeline while it’s fresh: who arrived when, what task was being performed, what you were told to do, and what you noticed about safety.
- Avoid quick recorded statements with insurers or defense representatives until you’ve reviewed your situation with a lawyer.
If you’re wondering whether a “construction accident AI” tool can help you manage this—technology can help organize notes and files, but it can’t replace a legal strategy built around New York evidence rules and liability issues.


