In and around Oswego, many injuries happen on projects that are busy but still “staged” around production—think frequent access changes, materials being moved, and crews rotating in and out.
That environment creates specific problems for injured workers and their families:
- Access points change mid-project. A safe route one week can become a makeshift climb the next.
- Documentation can lag reality. Inspection logs and safety checklists may exist, but they don’t always match what was actually happening at the time of the fall.
- Multiple contractors are common. General contractors, subcontractors, and equipment providers may each assume someone else handled safety compliance.
- Quick statements are pushed early. Adjusters or supervisors may want a recorded account before the full medical picture is known.
A local lawyer’s goal is to anchor the case in what happened on the specific Oswego job site—using the records that survive and the facts people tend to forget after the first few weeks.


