In many communities, construction accidents are treated like isolated workplace incidents. In Southern Pines, that’s not always how claims develop.
Construction projects frequently overlap with real-world movement—delivery vehicles, contractor trucks, subcontractors arriving for short windows, and pedestrians or drivers passing near active work zones. When an injury involves:
- A struck-by incident (equipment, vehicles, forklifts, or delivery traffic)
- Falls near entrances, sidewalks, or driveway edges used by the public
- Hazards created by temporary barriers, signage, or poorly managed access points
- Unsafe crossings between work areas and staging zones
…insurers may argue the accident was “unavoidable” or that the injured person should have noticed the hazard.
A lawyer’s job is to focus the claim on what a reasonable site operator should have done—based on the jobsite conditions, the control each contractor had, and what safety measures were in place at the time.


