In Charleston, many jobsite injuries are tied to conditions you can easily lose fast—like temporary barriers, signage, detours, and the way a work zone was set up around live traffic. If your accident involved:
- struck-by incidents (equipment, vehicles, forklifts, delivery trucks)
- unsafe loading/unloading areas
- inadequate warning signs or blocked visibility
- falls where debris or materials weren’t cleared in a timely way
- scaffolding/ladder issues in tight staging areas
…then what you preserve in the first days can matter a lot.
What to do now (practical, not complicated):
- Take photos/video of the work zone layout, signage, barriers, and the exact location—if it’s safe to do so.
- Save incident paperwork you receive (and any “first report” forms).
- Write down names of supervisors, safety personnel, and witnesses while the details are fresh.
- Keep medical records from the first visit onward—even if symptoms seem minor at first.
If you’re wondering whether technology like an AI tool can help organize this information: it may help you keep track, but a legal strategy still needs human review to connect your evidence to what West Virginia law requires.


