In a smaller community like Pendleton, it’s common for construction projects to involve general contractors, subcontractors, and equipment providers coordinating on tight schedules. When an accident happens, insurers often focus on one question: who had control of the unsafe condition at the moment of injury.
That can be complicated when:
- Work is split between crews (framing one day, concrete or roofing another).
- A subcontractor controls a specific task, but the general contractor controls site safety practices.
- Equipment is leased or operated by a different company than the one managing the worksite.
- The accident is tied to traffic flow, deliveries, or material staging near public roads and driveways.
Your claim strategy should match the way the work was actually organized—not assumptions from a quick conversation.


