In Yelm, construction sites often sit close to neighborhoods, farm roads, and busy commuting routes. That means witnesses may be transient (delivery drivers, nearby residents, passing subcontractors), and site conditions can change quickly.
Focus on these priorities:
- Get medical care and document symptoms consistently. Even if you think it’s “minor,” Washington insurers commonly look for medical records that match the accident timeline.
- Write down the details while you remember them—time of day, weather, what equipment was operating, where you were standing, and what you noticed about barriers, signage, or traffic control.
- Preserve site evidence before it’s gone. If it’s safe, take photos of the hazard area, temporary fencing, ladder/scaffold conditions, fallen debris, or how vehicles accessed the site.
- Avoid “quick clarifications” to adjusters until you understand what they’re asking and why. In many cases, early statements get repeated later in ways that don’t reflect your injury reality.
If you’re unsure what to capture, that’s exactly where legal guidance helps—because the goal is to preserve what matters for liability and causation, not just what’s convenient.


