In Lake Havasu City, construction activity ramps up with the seasons. That creates a common pattern after a scaffolding fall:
- Multiple contractors and subcontractors on-site at the same time (making control and duty harder to pin down).
- Site changes mid-project—materials moved, access points adjusted, platforms modified—without clear documentation of re-inspection.
- Heat, dust, and glare that can affect footing, visibility, and how quickly injuries are noticed and treated.
- Visitor-adjacent work zones (during peak tourism), where safety controls may be inconsistent between “work areas” and “public-facing” areas.
When responsibility is contested, the details matter: how the scaffold was assembled, what fall protection was (or wasn’t) in use, who signed off on inspections, and what the medical record shows about causation and severity.


