Construction projects rarely involve just one responsible party. In La Palma—and across California—scaffolding is often controlled through multiple layers: the property owner, the general contractor, the subcontractor performing the work, and sometimes the entity supplying or servicing scaffolding components.
What makes these cases harder is that liability often depends on details that aren’t obvious right after an injury, such as:
- how access to the scaffold was provided (or not provided)
- whether guardrails, toe boards, and safe work platforms were installed correctly
- whether fall protection was available and actually used
- whether the structure was inspected before use and after changes
Also, if your injury occurred during a shift change or a short window of site activity (common on industrial and mixed-use schedules), evidence may be fragmented—multiple reports, overlapping contracts, and competing accounts of what happened.


