Construction projects around Cheyenne often intersect with high-visibility areas: commuting routes, school zones, local events, and deliveries that keep moving even when crews are working. That creates a few common risk patterns:
- Work near active roadways and intersections. Injuries can involve struck-by hazards from vehicles, golf carts, delivery trucks, or equipment moving through constrained zones.
- Pedestrian traffic around active sites. Whether it’s a neighborhood build-out or work near public sidewalks, you may have competing responsibilities between site control, signage, and safe access.
- Weather and visibility factors. Wind, snow, and rapidly changing conditions can worsen ladder safety, footing, and equipment operation—especially during early mornings or late shifts.
- Multiple contractors and shared site control. In many Cheyenne projects, the general contractor controls site-wide safety while subcontractors control the specific task—so determining “who should have prevented the harm” becomes a record battle.
When these elements are involved, your claim often hinges on site logs, traffic-control plans, incident reports, and witness accounts from people who saw the hazard in real time.


