After a workplace fall, the scene doesn’t usually stay “as-is.” Crews may remove damaged planks, reconfigure access points, and replace equipment. The paperwork can change too—incident narratives get revised, maintenance logs get updated, and safety documentation may be produced selectively.
That’s why Buford injury victims benefit from moving early on three fronts:
- Preserving the jobsite record (photos, videos, inspection tags, access routes, and guardrail setup)
- Locking in the timeline (when the work started, when the scaffold was assembled, and when inspections occurred)
- Documenting the medical course (initial diagnosis, follow-up imaging, specialist visits, work restrictions)
A local attorney can also help you request the right records from the right parties—often the owner, general contractor, subcontractor, and equipment supplier—so your claim isn’t built on guesswork.


