Citrus Heights sits between major commuting routes and growing residential areas. That mix often means construction sites experience frequent scheduling changes, deliveries, and temporary access routes.
After a scaffolding fall, those day-to-day realities can matter legally. Common local scenarios we see include:
- Work zones near driveways, sidewalks, or shared access points where safe routes and barriers weren’t rechecked after materials were moved.
- Occupied or nearby properties where site control and warning signage weren’t consistent.
- Multi-trade projects where responsibility gets divided between the general contractor, subcontractors, and equipment providers—sometimes with conflicting accounts of who installed, inspected, or supervised the scaffolding.
In these situations, the timeline of what changed “right before” the fall can be just as important as what failed.


