Forklift injuries don’t only happen inside factories. In the Flowery Branch area, industrial activity can include distribution operations, supplier warehouses, and loading activity tied to regional trucking and logistics.
Some of the most frequent incident patterns we investigate include:
1) Forklift vs. pedestrian in shared aisles
When foot traffic crosses near dock doors, conveyor zones, or narrow warehouse lanes, visibility and traffic control matter. If pedestrians weren’t protected with barriers, markings, or route separation, the employer may have failed to manage a foreseeable risk.
2) Loads falling during stacking, staging, or re-positioning
Crush injuries, head trauma, and serious soft-tissue damage can occur when pallets shift, shelving is struck, or loads are handled improperly.
3) Forklift damage leading to secondary hazards
A forklift collision can create knock-on dangers—like blocked exits, damaged flooring, trip hazards, or compromised equipment—turning a single incident into multiple injury pathways.
4) Equipment issues and “known” maintenance problems
Even when the forklift appears to be working, defects in hydraulics, brakes, alarms, or steering can contribute to loss of control. Maintenance records often become the battleground.