Many injured people in Cortland work in fast-paced environments—shift work, time-sensitive production, loading/unloading cycles, and frequent equipment use. That reality can make the difference between a claim that moves forward and one that gets delayed.
After a crush incident, questions typically arise quickly:
- Was the area secured and guarded?
- Were lockout/tagout or startup controls followed?
- Were employees trained for the exact task being performed?
- Did maintenance or inspection records show overdue issues?
Because the details are technical, insurers may push narratives like “it was unavoidable” or “the injury was unrelated.” Your attorney’s job is to build a clear, evidence-based account that matches what New York law requires to prove responsibility and damages.


