In and around Griffin, many forklift incidents happen in fast-moving operations where pedestrians, deliveries, and industrial traffic share tight spaces—loading docks, back hallways, receiving areas, and yard lanes. When schedules are tight, visibility and traffic control often become the difference between “routine” and “catastrophic.”
Common Griffin-area patterns we investigate include:
- Pedestrian and dock-zone risk: workers walking near lift routes, vehicles backing in confined areas, or unclear lane separation.
- Delivery and receiving interference: forklifts operating while trucks arrive/depart, creating sudden changes in traffic flow.
- Weather and surface issues: Georgia rain and humidity can contribute to slippery or uneven surfaces, affecting traction and braking.
- Shift-change pressure: incidents clustered around busy handoffs when supervision is stretched.
Because these cases often involve multiple teams (operations, safety, maintenance, and sometimes contractors), the evidence needs to be collected in a coordinated way—early, before details disappear.


