In many Colorado construction injury cases, the incident is only part of the story. Employers, contractors, and site managers often have multiple layers of safety responsibilities—especially when different crews, subcontractors, and equipment providers are involved.
In Johnstown, that complexity can show up in common on-the-ground scenarios:
- Phased construction and frequent site changes: Work areas evolve week to week, and scaffolds may be moved, reconfigured, or accessed differently as crews rotate.
- Weather and ground conditions: Colorado conditions can affect stability and setup practices, particularly when platforms are assembled near uneven surfaces or where access paths change.
- Industrial and commercial job schedules: Projects sometimes run on deadlines that increase the risk of shortcuts—like incomplete access setups or delayed safety fixes—after a scaffold is adjusted.
When a fall happens, insurers frequently focus on two themes: whether the setup was safe and whether the injured worker acted reasonably. Your ability to counter those points depends on evidence and documentation timing.


