Tulsa projects frequently involve mixed work crews, frequent material deliveries, and changing site conditions—sometimes while the surrounding area stays active. That creates additional issues that adjusters and defense teams look for, such as:
- Who controlled the site at the time of the incident (general contractor vs. subcontractor vs. site supervisor)
- Whether the area was protected for pedestrians and nearby traffic
- Whether deliveries and equipment movement were planned and communicated
- Whether safety measures were actually in place (not just written in a binder)
Even when the injury seems straightforward—like a fall, caught-between incident, or a struck-by hazard—the proof often turns on the timeline and the specific safety decisions made that day.


