Construction and maintenance projects in the Scotts Valley area frequently involve tight schedules and multiple subcontractors. That environment can lead to an early blame cycle—“it was how the worker climbed,” “it was training,” “it was a one-off mistake,” or “the company isn’t responsible.”
After a fall, insurers and employers may ask for statements quickly, request paperwork, or suggest that the matter is minor. But in many cases, the real issue isn’t just that a fall occurred—it’s whether the worksite was set up and supervised in a way that reasonably reduced fall risk.
Local legal help matters because the strongest claims usually depend on details that get lost under time pressure:
- What the access route looked like (ladders, stairs, or scaffold entry points)
- Whether guardrails/toe boards were installed where people were working
- Whether the scaffold was inspected after changes or re-positioning
- Who had control of safety on that specific day


