In and around Griffin, construction often involves fast-moving schedules for renovations, commercial work, and industrial maintenance. That means the conditions around a scaffolding incident can look different hours later—planks removed, access points altered, equipment replaced, or footage overwritten.
That’s why the first priority is preserving the details that prove how the fall happened:
- Photos of the setup (platform height, access ladder/stair placement, guardrails, tie-ins, and decking condition)
- Names of supervisors on shift and any safety lead who was present
- A timeline of what changed before the fall (material deliveries, scaffold adjustments, weather impacts, rework)
- Copies of incident reports, supervisor notes, and any “near miss” or safety log entries
When evidence disappears, disputes get easier for insurers. When it’s preserved, liability becomes clearer.


