In the Alton area, many worksite incidents connect to tight schedules and multi-trade coordination—especially where crews are working near active operations, delivery routes, or ongoing public access on adjacent properties. That matters because scaffolding safety often depends on more than one decision, such as:
- who controlled the work zone and access points,
- whether the scaffold was inspected after setup changes,
- whether fall protection and safe entry/exit routes were actually used,
- how subcontractors coordinated equipment and staging.
When those details aren’t tracked properly, insurers may argue the injured worker “should have noticed” or “misused” the equipment. A local attorney’s job is to focus on what the site required, what the records show, and what safety failures likely contributed to the fall.


