Construction sites in our area frequently involve layered responsibilities—general contractors coordinating trades, subcontractors managing specific tasks, and property owners maintaining common-site rules. After a scaffolding-related injury, insurers may argue that the injured person’s actions (or a different subcontractor’s work) caused the fall.
In practice, a strong case usually focuses on who controlled the work at the time and what safety systems were required for that specific setup—not just whether the fall happened.
Local factors that can affect the evidence include:
- Rapidly changing jobsite conditions (materials moved, access points adjusted, temporary work reconfigured)
- Shared work zones where multiple crews are operating at once
- Documentation gaps when safety inspections aren’t consistently logged or are recorded later than they should be


