The decisions you make immediately after an accident can affect whether your claim stays strong—or gets weakened by gaps and inconsistencies.
Focus on these priorities:
- Get medical care right away (even if symptoms seem minor). Texas insurers often rely on medical documentation to understand causation and severity.
- Report the incident through the proper channels at the worksite. Request a copy of any incident report or documentation you’re given.
- Preserve evidence before it disappears: take photos of the hazard, the work area, barriers, signage, and anything related to access/egress.
- Write down what you remember while it’s still clear—how the injury happened, what equipment was involved, who was nearby, and whether there were traffic cones, flaggers, or warning measures.
- Be careful with recorded statements. If you’re asked to give an early statement to an insurer or company representative, talk to a lawyer first.
Why this matters locally: In Lancaster, construction zones frequently overlap with everyday travel patterns—deliveries, workers commuting in and out, and nearby public roads. That can create disputes over what warnings were in place and which party controlled the site conditions.


