Snellville’s industrial and logistics activity—warehouse operations, distribution centers, and manufacturing workplaces—means forklift traffic is often shared with delivery schedules, loading/unloading zones, and pedestrian movement around entrances and staging areas. In practice, injuries often happen in “routine” moments that still carry legal risk:
- A pedestrian walks through a lane near a loading dock (visibility limits, glare, or poor signage)
- A pallet or product shifts while being moved to/around a dock door
- A forklift backs up or turns at the edge of an aisle where workers cross paths
- A vehicle is operated despite maintenance or inspection issues
When that kind of workplace accident occurs, determining responsibility can involve more than one party—the forklift operator, the employer, a supervisor, and sometimes equipment vendors or maintenance contractors.


