In many Selma projects, more than one company touches the work: a general contractor coordinates the site, subcontractors perform specific tasks, and different crews may assemble, adjust, or move scaffolding components as the project progresses.
That matters because a fall claim is rarely about a single mistake in isolation. It’s often about a chain of decisions—such as:
- who controlled access to the scaffold at the time of the incident,
- whether guardrails and safe access points were in place when work shifted,
- whether inspections were performed after changes,
- and whether fall protection requirements were actually followed on the ground.
When insurers dispute responsibility, they frequently argue that “someone else” controlled the equipment or that the injured person should have noticed the hazard. A local attorney strategy focuses on establishing control and duty based on the Selma jobsite’s real workflow.


