Ashland’s projects often involve tight work zones—construction and repairs near active roadways, commercial properties, and neighborhoods where deliveries and pedestrian traffic don’t stop. That creates additional risk patterns:
- Work-zone traffic conflicts: injuries can occur when equipment, materials, or vehicles share space with commuters and visitors.
- Site access and crowd control issues: people may be on-site for short visits, deliveries, or inspections, even when the public isn’t “supposed” to be there.
- Short staffing and subcontractor turnover: multiple crews can rotate through quickly, which can blur responsibility if records aren’t gathered early.
These details affect liability. They also affect what evidence still exists—so the “right next step” in Ashland usually isn’t waiting.


